Neureuther wins Moscow parallel slalom event

Felix Neureuther of Germany won the World Cup parallel slalom here on Friday in an event staged on an artificial slope to help promote Russia’s readiness to host the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
France’s Jean-Baptiste Grange was second with American superstar Bode Miller taking third ahead of compatriot Ted Ligety in a competition held [...]


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Triggered at line # 603 FeedWordPress version: 2009.1112 MagpieRSS version: 2009.0725 WordPress version: 2.9.1 PHP version: 5.2.14 SyndicatedPost::insert_new::_wp_id: array(3) { ["$this->_wp_id"]=> int(0) ["$dbpost"]=> array(17) { ["post_title"]=> string(38) "Sochi Starts Search For Olympic Mascot" ["post_content"]=> string(2170) "<p class=\"iocCopyIntro\">The Organising Committee for the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games has launched a nationwide competition in Russia to design the mascot for the Sochi Olympic Games. The competition will run from 1 September till 5 December 2010, and participants can submit their ideas through <a href=\"http://talisman.sochi2014.ru/\">a special web portal</a> (in Russian only) or by mail. An expert jury, made-up of filmmakers, animators, artists, cultural workers, professional marketers and athletes, will then create a shortlist of finalists. The winning design will be decided on 7 February 2011 through a public SMS and telephone vote. The winner will receive two tickets to the Opening Ceremony of the Games.</p> <h5>A long history of Olympic mascots</h5> <p>The first official Olympic mascot - Waldi the dachshund - was launched on the occasion of the <a href=\"http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Summer/Munich-1972/\">1972 Olympic Games in Munich</a>, although an unofficial mascot called \"Schuss\" had appeared at the <a href=\"http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Winter/Grenoble-1968/\">1968 Winter Games in Grenoble</a>. Since that time, the mascot has become a regular feature at the Games appearing alone or with friends and taking not only animal forms but also those of traditional dolls and even an ice cube and a piece of snow. The latest mascot to join this special Olympic family is <a href=\"http://www.mylondon2012.com/mascots/\">Wenlock</a>, who will be welcoming fans to London in 2012.&nbsp;</p> <h5>Sochi 2014</h5> <p><a href=\"http://www.sochi2014.ru\">Sochi</a> was elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala City on 4 July 2007. Sochi won the vote against the cities of Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea) in the second round of voting. The Russian city edged out PyeongChang 51 votes to 47, with Salzburg having been eliminated in round one. The Sochi Games will play host to the seven Olympic Winter sports currently on the Olympic programme and will run from 7 to 23 February 2014.</p>" ["post_excerpt"]=> string(2170) "<p class=\"iocCopyIntro\">The Organising Committee for the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games has launched a nationwide competition in Russia to design the mascot for the Sochi Olympic Games. The competition will run from 1 September till 5 December 2010, and participants can submit their ideas through <a href=\"http://talisman.sochi2014.ru/\">a special web portal</a> (in Russian only) or by mail. An expert jury, made-up of filmmakers, animators, artists, cultural workers, professional marketers and athletes, will then create a shortlist of finalists. The winning design will be decided on 7 February 2011 through a public SMS and telephone vote. The winner will receive two tickets to the Opening Ceremony of the Games.</p> <h5>A long history of Olympic mascots</h5> <p>The first official Olympic mascot - Waldi the dachshund - was launched on the occasion of the <a href=\"http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Summer/Munich-1972/\">1972 Olympic Games in Munich</a>, although an unofficial mascot called \"Schuss\" had appeared at the <a href=\"http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Winter/Grenoble-1968/\">1968 Winter Games in Grenoble</a>. Since that time, the mascot has become a regular feature at the Games appearing alone or with friends and taking not only animal forms but also those of traditional dolls and even an ice cube and a piece of snow. The latest mascot to join this special Olympic family is <a href=\"http://www.mylondon2012.com/mascots/\">Wenlock</a>, who will be welcoming fans to London in 2012.&nbsp;</p> <h5>Sochi 2014</h5> <p><a href=\"http://www.sochi2014.ru\">Sochi</a> was elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala City on 4 July 2007. Sochi won the vote against the cities of Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea) in the second round of voting. The Russian city edged out PyeongChang 51 votes to 47, with Salzburg having been eliminated in round one. The Sochi Games will play host to the seven Olympic Winter sports currently on the Olympic programme and will run from 7 to 23 February 2014.</p>" ["epoch"]=> array(3) { ["issued"]=> int(1283421180) ["created"]=> NULL ["modified"]=> int(1283421180) } ["post_date"]=> string(19) "2010-09-02 03:53:00" ["post_modified"]=> string(19) "2010-09-02 03:53:00" ["post_date_gmt"]=> string(19) "2010-09-02 09:53:00" ["post_modified_gmt"]=> string(19) "2010-09-02 09:53:00" ["post_status"]=> string(7) "publish" ["comment_status"]=> string(4) "open" ["ping_status"]=> string(4) "open" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=99082" ["meta"]=> array(6) { ["syndication_source"]=> string(38) "International Olympic Committee : News" ["syndication_source_uri"]=> string(75) "http://www.olympic.org/rss/feed.aspx?Language=en&NewsPage=29&Aggregate=true" ["syndication_feed"]=> string(75) "http://www.olympic.org/rss/feed.aspx?Language=en&NewsPage=29&Aggregate=true" ["syndication_feed_id"]=> string(2) "28" ["syndication_permalink"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=99082" ["syndication_item_hash"]=> string(32) "f720b731bb366a016497c21570952acb" } ["tags_input"]=> array(0) { } ["post_author"]=> int(2) ["post_category"]=> array(1) { [0]=> int(1) } ["post_pingback"]=> bool(false) } ["$this"]=> object(SyndicatedPost)#276 (10) { ["item"]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(38) "Sochi Starts Search For Olympic Mascot" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(2156) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The Organising Committee for the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games has launched a nationwide competition in Russia to design the mascot for the Sochi Olympic Games. The competition will run from 1 September till 5 December 2010, and participants can submit their ideas through <a href="http://talisman.sochi2014.ru/">a special web portal</a> (in Russian only) or by mail. An expert jury, made-up of filmmakers, animators, artists, cultural workers, professional marketers and athletes, will then create a shortlist of finalists. The winning design will be decided on 7 February 2011 through a public SMS and telephone vote. The winner will receive two tickets to the Opening Ceremony of the Games.</p> <h5>A long history of Olympic mascots</h5> <p>The first official Olympic mascot - Waldi the dachshund - was launched on the occasion of the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Summer/Munich-1972/">1972 Olympic Games in Munich</a>, although an unofficial mascot called "Schuss" had appeared at the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Winter/Grenoble-1968/">1968 Winter Games in Grenoble</a>. Since that time, the mascot has become a regular feature at the Games appearing alone or with friends and taking not only animal forms but also those of traditional dolls and even an ice cube and a piece of snow. The latest mascot to join this special Olympic family is <a href="http://www.mylondon2012.com/mascots/">Wenlock</a>, who will be welcoming fans to London in 2012.&nbsp;</p> <h5>Sochi 2014</h5> <p><a href="http://www.sochi2014.ru">Sochi</a> was elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala City on 4 July 2007. Sochi won the vote against the cities of Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea) in the second round of voting. The Russian city edged out PyeongChang 51 votes to 47, with Salzburg having been eliminated in round one. The Sochi Games will play host to the seven Olympic Winter sports currently on the Olympic programme and will run from 7 to 23 February 2014.</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(19) "9/2/2010 9:53:00 AM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=99082" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(2156) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The Organising Committee for the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games has launched a nationwide competition in Russia to design the mascot for the Sochi Olympic Games. The competition will run from 1 September till 5 December 2010, and participants can submit their ideas through <a href="http://talisman.sochi2014.ru/">a special web portal</a> (in Russian only) or by mail. An expert jury, made-up of filmmakers, animators, artists, cultural workers, professional marketers and athletes, will then create a shortlist of finalists. The winning design will be decided on 7 February 2011 through a public SMS and telephone vote. The winner will receive two tickets to the Opening Ceremony of the Games.</p> <h5>A long history of Olympic mascots</h5> <p>The first official Olympic mascot - Waldi the dachshund - was launched on the occasion of the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Summer/Munich-1972/">1972 Olympic Games in Munich</a>, although an unofficial mascot called "Schuss" had appeared at the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Winter/Grenoble-1968/">1968 Winter Games in Grenoble</a>. Since that time, the mascot has become a regular feature at the Games appearing alone or with friends and taking not only animal forms but also those of traditional dolls and even an ice cube and a piece of snow. The latest mascot to join this special Olympic family is <a href="http://www.mylondon2012.com/mascots/">Wenlock</a>, who will be welcoming fans to London in 2012.&nbsp;</p> <h5>Sochi 2014</h5> <p><a href="http://www.sochi2014.ru">Sochi</a> was elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala City on 4 July 2007. Sochi won the vote against the cities of Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea) in the second round of voting. The Russian city edged out PyeongChang 51 votes to 47, with Salzburg having been eliminated in round one. 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The competition will run from 1 September till 5 December 2010, and participants can submit their ideas through <a href="http://talisman.sochi2014.ru/">a special web portal</a> (in Russian only) or by mail. An expert jury, made-up of filmmakers, animators, artists, cultural workers, professional marketers and athletes, will then create a shortlist of finalists. The winning design will be decided on 7 February 2011 through a public SMS and telephone vote. The winner will receive two tickets to the Opening Ceremony of the Games.</p> <h5>A long history of Olympic mascots</h5> <p>The first official Olympic mascot - Waldi the dachshund - was launched on the occasion of the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Summer/Munich-1972/">1972 Olympic Games in Munich</a>, although an unofficial mascot called "Schuss" had appeared at the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Winter/Grenoble-1968/">1968 Winter Games in Grenoble</a>. Since that time, the mascot has become a regular feature at the Games appearing alone or with friends and taking not only animal forms but also those of traditional dolls and even an ice cube and a piece of snow. The latest mascot to join this special Olympic family is <a href="http://www.mylondon2012.com/mascots/">Wenlock</a>, who will be welcoming fans to London in 2012.&nbsp;</p> <h5>Sochi 2014</h5> <p><a href="http://www.sochi2014.ru">Sochi</a> was elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala City on 4 July 2007. Sochi won the vote against the cities of Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea) in the second round of voting. The Russian city edged out PyeongChang 51 votes to 47, with Salzburg having been eliminated in round one. The Sochi Games will play host to the seven Olympic Winter sports currently on the Olympic programme and will run from 7 to 23 February 2014.</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(19) "9/2/2010 9:53:00 AM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=99082" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(2156) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The Organising Committee for the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games has launched a nationwide competition in Russia to design the mascot for the Sochi Olympic Games. The competition will run from 1 September till 5 December 2010, and participants can submit their ideas through <a href="http://talisman.sochi2014.ru/">a special web portal</a> (in Russian only) or by mail. An expert jury, made-up of filmmakers, animators, artists, cultural workers, professional marketers and athletes, will then create a shortlist of finalists. The winning design will be decided on 7 February 2011 through a public SMS and telephone vote. The winner will receive two tickets to the Opening Ceremony of the Games.</p> <h5>A long history of Olympic mascots</h5> <p>The first official Olympic mascot - Waldi the dachshund - was launched on the occasion of the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Summer/Munich-1972/">1972 Olympic Games in Munich</a>, although an unofficial mascot called "Schuss" had appeared at the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Winter/Grenoble-1968/">1968 Winter Games in Grenoble</a>. Since that time, the mascot has become a regular feature at the Games appearing alone or with friends and taking not only animal forms but also those of traditional dolls and even an ice cube and a piece of snow. The latest mascot to join this special Olympic family is <a href="http://www.mylondon2012.com/mascots/">Wenlock</a>, who will be welcoming fans to London in 2012.&nbsp;</p> <h5>Sochi 2014</h5> <p><a href="http://www.sochi2014.ru">Sochi</a> was elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala City on 4 July 2007. Sochi won the vote against the cities of Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea) in the second round of voting. The Russian city edged out PyeongChang 51 votes to 47, with Salzburg having been eliminated in round one. The Sochi Games will play host to the seven Olympic Winter sports currently on the Olympic programme and will run from 7 to 23 February 2014.</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1283421180) } [1]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(47) "A lovely, moving donation to The Olympic Museum" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(1481) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">Recently, at The Olympic Museum, we welcomed two lovely champions: Stéphane Lambiel, the Swiss skater with an impressive record (twice world champion, twice European runner-up, silver medallist in Turin in 2006, and bronze medallist in the world championships); and Joannie Rochette, the talented Canadian skater who won a bronze medal in Vancouver last February, and who courageously competed in the events only two days after the sudden death of her mother.</p> <p>These two young athletes came to make a donation to The Olympic Museum: Lambiel donated the zebra-striped suit he wore when he won the Olympic silver medal, and Rochette donated the first dress she wore in her Olympic short programme.</p> <p>Olympic Museum Curator Frédérique Jamolli welcomed the young athletes and recalled how their performances, be it in Turin or Vancouver, had enthused and excited the general public, whom they had both won over.</p> <p>Stéphane Lambiel and Joannie Rochette then received the Olympic Museum’s traditional donor’s certificate and signed the guest book. They both said that it was both a pleasure and an honour to make their donations, in the hope that these two outfits would provoke the same emotions in the visitors as they had felt themselves.<br /></p><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/8_9kMwtPUY8?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US" width="540" height="328" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always"></embed>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(20) "8/30/2010 4:32:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=97755" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(1481) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">Recently, at The Olympic Museum, we welcomed two lovely champions: Stéphane Lambiel, the Swiss skater with an impressive record (twice world champion, twice European runner-up, silver medallist in Turin in 2006, and bronze medallist in the world championships); and Joannie Rochette, the talented Canadian skater who won a bronze medal in Vancouver last February, and who courageously competed in the events only two days after the sudden death of her mother.</p> <p>These two young athletes came to make a donation to The Olympic Museum: Lambiel donated the zebra-striped suit he wore when he won the Olympic silver medal, and Rochette donated the first dress she wore in her Olympic short programme.</p> <p>Olympic Museum Curator Frédérique Jamolli welcomed the young athletes and recalled how their performances, be it in Turin or Vancouver, had enthused and excited the general public, whom they had both won over.</p> <p>Stéphane Lambiel and Joannie Rochette then received the Olympic Museum’s traditional donor’s certificate and signed the guest book. They both said that it was both a pleasure and an honour to make their donations, in the hope that these two outfits would provoke the same emotions in the visitors as they had felt themselves.<br /></p><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/8_9kMwtPUY8?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US" width="540" height="328" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always"></embed>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1283185920) } [2]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(29) "London 2012 Venues Take Shape" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(4071) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">With a little under two years to go, the London 2012 venues are rapidly taking shape, as water is now flowing at the canoe slalom venue, the seating structure is taking shape at the basketball arena, ground preparation work is beginning at Greenwich Park, and landscaping work is getting underway at the Olympic Village. With athletes and teams now in the process of qualifying for the 2012 Games, this progress is a reassuring sign that London is on time and on track to welcome the world’s top sports people in 2012.</p> <h5>Water Works</h5> <p>Construction work on the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/water-flowing-at-london-2012-canoe-slalom-venue.php">new lake and competition courses</a> has been completed at the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/lee-valley-white-water-centre.php">London 2012 canoe slalom venue</a> in the <a href="http://www.leevalleypark.org.uk/en/content/cms/white_water_canoe_ce/white_water_canoe_ce.aspx">Lee Valley Regional Park</a> and this has allowed <a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/lee-valley-white-water-centre.php">water to start flowing</a> at the venue, so that the courses can be tested. The venue is expected to be completed later this year and will include a standard 300m competition course, a boat conveyor, a 160m intermediate/training course, a 10,000m² finish lake, and a facility building and pumping house.</p> <h5>Capacity of 12,000</h5> <p><a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/london-2012-basketball-arena-prepares-for-seat-installation.php">Thousands of seats</a> are soon to be installed in the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/basketball-arena.php">London 2012 basketball arena</a>, which is reported to be one of the largest temporary venues ever used for an Olympic and Paralympic Games. The seating structure is now taking shape, before the black and orange seats – representing the colours of a basketball – are put into place. At Games-time, the venue will host basketball, handball, wheelchair basketball, and wheelchair rugby.</p> <h5>Preparing The Ground</h5> <p>Work has begun on preparing the ground at Greenwich Park, the site of <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/greenwich-park.php">London’s Olympic equestrian venue</a>. The work, which will be carried out by London 2012 sub-contractors in association with The Royal Parks, will ensure that the condition of the grass is ideal for <a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2009/equestrian-stars-tour-greenwich-park.php">the competitors in 2012</a>. <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/greenwich-park-ground-preparation-work-begins-for-2012.php">Work will include irrigation, de-compaction, mowing, and some other enhancements</a>. The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) has also announced <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/athletes-village-to-feature-new-green-spaces.php">plans for thousands of new trees, parks, play areas, and open spaces</a> to support the new homes being delivered in the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/olympic-village.php">London 2012 Olympic Village</a>. Landscaping is already underway for the creation of an extensive wetlands area on the Village site, with the overall plans for these green spaces&nbsp;adding to the landscaping works already underway in the Olympic Park site, which is creating one of the largest new urban parks in the UK for over 100 years.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p>London was elected as the host city for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p> <p>Want to get involved in London 2012? How about <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/volunteer/index.php">volunteering</a>?</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(21) "8/24/2010 12:00:00 AM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=97649" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(4071) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">With a little under two years to go, the London 2012 venues are rapidly taking shape, as water is now flowing at the canoe slalom venue, the seating structure is taking shape at the basketball arena, ground preparation work is beginning at Greenwich Park, and landscaping work is getting underway at the Olympic Village. With athletes and teams now in the process of qualifying for the 2012 Games, this progress is a reassuring sign that London is on time and on track to welcome the world’s top sports people in 2012.</p> <h5>Water Works</h5> <p>Construction work on the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/water-flowing-at-london-2012-canoe-slalom-venue.php">new lake and competition courses</a> has been completed at the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/lee-valley-white-water-centre.php">London 2012 canoe slalom venue</a> in the <a href="http://www.leevalleypark.org.uk/en/content/cms/white_water_canoe_ce/white_water_canoe_ce.aspx">Lee Valley Regional Park</a> and this has allowed <a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/lee-valley-white-water-centre.php">water to start flowing</a> at the venue, so that the courses can be tested. The venue is expected to be completed later this year and will include a standard 300m competition course, a boat conveyor, a 160m intermediate/training course, a 10,000m² finish lake, and a facility building and pumping house.</p> <h5>Capacity of 12,000</h5> <p><a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/london-2012-basketball-arena-prepares-for-seat-installation.php">Thousands of seats</a> are soon to be installed in the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/basketball-arena.php">London 2012 basketball arena</a>, which is reported to be one of the largest temporary venues ever used for an Olympic and Paralympic Games. The seating structure is now taking shape, before the black and orange seats – representing the colours of a basketball – are put into place. At Games-time, the venue will host basketball, handball, wheelchair basketball, and wheelchair rugby.</p> <h5>Preparing The Ground</h5> <p>Work has begun on preparing the ground at Greenwich Park, the site of <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/greenwich-park.php">London’s Olympic equestrian venue</a>. The work, which will be carried out by London 2012 sub-contractors in association with The Royal Parks, will ensure that the condition of the grass is ideal for <a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2009/equestrian-stars-tour-greenwich-park.php">the competitors in 2012</a>. <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/greenwich-park-ground-preparation-work-begins-for-2012.php">Work will include irrigation, de-compaction, mowing, and some other enhancements</a>. The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) has also announced <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/athletes-village-to-feature-new-green-spaces.php">plans for thousands of new trees, parks, play areas, and open spaces</a> to support the new homes being delivered in the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/olympic-village.php">London 2012 Olympic Village</a>. Landscaping is already underway for the creation of an extensive wetlands area on the Village site, with the overall plans for these green spaces&nbsp;adding to the landscaping works already underway in the Olympic Park site, which is creating one of the largest new urban parks in the UK for over 100 years.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p>London was elected as the host city for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p> <p>Want to get involved in London 2012? How about <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/volunteer/index.php">volunteering</a>?</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1282608000) } [3]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(60) "Three Olympian brothers at The Olympic Museum for a donation" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(2145) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">They already made names for themselves at the XXI Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver last February. Three brothers from one family present at the Olympic Games is something quite exceptional, and it is for this reason that the people responsible for the Museum collections approached them when they were asking for donations in Vancouver. </p> <p>On Thursday 20 August at The Olympic Museum, the three Ligocki brothers, Luckasz, Michal and Mateusz, accompanied by their parents, donated to The Olympic Museum the full set of equipment they wore in Vancouver, either as athletes or as an official: snowboard, bindings, boots, helmet, gloves, mask, bodysuits, delegation clothing, etc. The donations also included accreditation cards, bibs and some photographs. </p> <p><img alt="" src="/Global/Images/News/08-2010/24/Donation_BIG_2.jpg" /></p> <p>The donation was made in the presence of Francis Gabet and Frédérique Jamolli, Director and Curator of The Olympic Museum respectively. All three athletes received a donor’s diploma signed by the IOC President, acknowledging their donation.</p> <p>In the book signed successively by the three brothers, Michal wrote: “I’m feeling so special, to give my Olympic equipment to this Museum. From now on I’ll feel that the memory of me and my family will live 4 ever!” </p> <h5>A bit of background…</h5> <p>Mateusz Ligocki (born 1982) participated in the Turin Games in 2006 in snowboard and snowboard cross. He was the only athlete to compete in the two disciplines. In Vancouver, he participated in the snowboard cross events. </p> <p>Michal Ligocki (born 1985) also participated in the Turin and Vancouver Games, but in half-pipe.</p> <p>The two brothers really want to participate in a third edition of the Games and are seriously preparing themselves for the 2014 Games in Sochi. </p> <p>As for the oldest Lukasz brother (born 1980), he is FIS snowboard A license judge and technical delegate for snowboard. He was the Deputy Chef de Mission for the Polish team in Whistler.</p> <p><img alt="" src="/Global/Images/News/08-2010/24/Donation_BIG_3.jpg" /><br /></p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(20) "8/23/2010 3:02:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=97661" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(2145) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">They already made names for themselves at the XXI Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver last February. Three brothers from one family present at the Olympic Games is something quite exceptional, and it is for this reason that the people responsible for the Museum collections approached them when they were asking for donations in Vancouver. </p> <p>On Thursday 20 August at The Olympic Museum, the three Ligocki brothers, Luckasz, Michal and Mateusz, accompanied by their parents, donated to The Olympic Museum the full set of equipment they wore in Vancouver, either as athletes or as an official: snowboard, bindings, boots, helmet, gloves, mask, bodysuits, delegation clothing, etc. The donations also included accreditation cards, bibs and some photographs. </p> <p><img alt="" src="/Global/Images/News/08-2010/24/Donation_BIG_2.jpg" /></p> <p>The donation was made in the presence of Francis Gabet and Frédérique Jamolli, Director and Curator of The Olympic Museum respectively. All three athletes received a donor’s diploma signed by the IOC President, acknowledging their donation.</p> <p>In the book signed successively by the three brothers, Michal wrote: “I’m feeling so special, to give my Olympic equipment to this Museum. From now on I’ll feel that the memory of me and my family will live 4 ever!” </p> <h5>A bit of background…</h5> <p>Mateusz Ligocki (born 1982) participated in the Turin Games in 2006 in snowboard and snowboard cross. He was the only athlete to compete in the two disciplines. In Vancouver, he participated in the snowboard cross events. </p> <p>Michal Ligocki (born 1985) also participated in the Turin and Vancouver Games, but in half-pipe.</p> <p>The two brothers really want to participate in a third edition of the Games and are seriously preparing themselves for the 2014 Games in Sochi. </p> <p>As for the oldest Lukasz brother (born 1980), he is FIS snowboard A license judge and technical delegate for snowboard. He was the Deputy Chef de Mission for the Polish team in Whistler.</p> <p><img alt="" src="/Global/Images/News/08-2010/24/Donation_BIG_3.jpg" /><br /></p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1282575720) } [4]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(38) "London 2012 Celebrates Two Years-To-Go" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(4241) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">27 July 2010 marks the two-years-to-go point before the opening of the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/splash/index.php">London 2012 Olympic Games</a>. This important milestone in London’s progress is being celebrated with a number of events across the host city and country. </p> <p>From 23-25 July, the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/open-weekend/index.php">London 2012 Open Weekend</a> was organised across the UK and included over 800 “<a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/london-2012-open-weekend-2010.php">challenging</a>” events for the public. This was followed today by the launch of London 2012’s specialist volunteer programme, the opening of London 2012’s first official shop, a number of special events in the Olympic Park, and <a href="http://www.london2012.com/press/media-releases/2010/07/london-2012-celebrates-two-years-to-go.php">numerous other events</a> organised by London 2012’s partners.</p> <h5>Huge Progress</h5> <p><a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Members/Count-Jacques-ROGGE/">International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge</a> said, “The new Olympic venues are now a visible part of London’s skyline, and the London 2012 Organising Committee is progressing well in its preparations to welcome the athletes of the world. With two years to go, London has made huge progress in the development of its Olympic project, and I am confident in London’s ability to stage Games of the highest standard, as we enter the back straight of this race that will lead us to 2012.” </p> <h5>Sport In The Park</h5> <p>With the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/index.php">main venues</a> in London’s Olympic Park on track to be completed next year, a number of special events are being held in the Park today, which shows the great progress that London has made in its construction projects. For example, Olympic gold medallist Sir Chris Hoy is taking part in a cycling activity within the velodrome, former NBA star John Amaechi is shooting some hoops in the basketball arena, Michael Johnson is sprinting on a temporary track in the Olympic Stadium, and the first group of people will be walking across the main access bridge between the Aquatics Centre and the Olympic Stadium.</p> <h5>Are You Ready? Plan Your Games!</h5> <p>The athletes are in full preparation for the 2012 Games, the venues are taking shape and the organisation is making <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Media/?articleNewsGroup=-1&amp;articleId=93762">solid progress</a>, but the question is are you ready for 2012? With the 2012 Games fast approaching, now is the time to start planning your role and your summer of 2012. Would you like to attend an Olympic event? Then <a href="http://www.tickets.london2012.com/?camefrom=CFC_UK_LONDON2012_L2012_SIGNUPSPLASH">sign up for ticketing information</a>. Thinking about volunteering? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/volunteering">Sign up for more information</a>. Perhaps attend an event during the Cultural Olympiad? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/cultural-olympiad/index.php">Find out more</a>. See the Olympic Torch Relay? It’s coming <a href="http://www.london2012.com/blog/2010/05/london-2012-torch-relay-bringing-the-games-to-your-doors.php">to a town near you</a>! Maybe create something and be <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/inspire-programme/index.php">part of the inspire programme</a>? Or teach children using the Games to inspire them? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/education/index.php">It’s all here</a>. There are numerous ways that you can play a part in 2012, start thinking and planning what you want to do now, so that you don’t miss out.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(21) "7/27/2010 12:19:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=95219" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(4241) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">27 July 2010 marks the two-years-to-go point before the opening of the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/splash/index.php">London 2012 Olympic Games</a>. This important milestone in London’s progress is being celebrated with a number of events across the host city and country. </p> <p>From 23-25 July, the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/open-weekend/index.php">London 2012 Open Weekend</a> was organised across the UK and included over 800 “<a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/london-2012-open-weekend-2010.php">challenging</a>” events for the public. This was followed today by the launch of London 2012’s specialist volunteer programme, the opening of London 2012’s first official shop, a number of special events in the Olympic Park, and <a href="http://www.london2012.com/press/media-releases/2010/07/london-2012-celebrates-two-years-to-go.php">numerous other events</a> organised by London 2012’s partners.</p> <h5>Huge Progress</h5> <p><a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Members/Count-Jacques-ROGGE/">International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge</a> said, “The new Olympic venues are now a visible part of London’s skyline, and the London 2012 Organising Committee is progressing well in its preparations to welcome the athletes of the world. With two years to go, London has made huge progress in the development of its Olympic project, and I am confident in London’s ability to stage Games of the highest standard, as we enter the back straight of this race that will lead us to 2012.” </p> <h5>Sport In The Park</h5> <p>With the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/index.php">main venues</a> in London’s Olympic Park on track to be completed next year, a number of special events are being held in the Park today, which shows the great progress that London has made in its construction projects. For example, Olympic gold medallist Sir Chris Hoy is taking part in a cycling activity within the velodrome, former NBA star John Amaechi is shooting some hoops in the basketball arena, Michael Johnson is sprinting on a temporary track in the Olympic Stadium, and the first group of people will be walking across the main access bridge between the Aquatics Centre and the Olympic Stadium.</p> <h5>Are You Ready? Plan Your Games!</h5> <p>The athletes are in full preparation for the 2012 Games, the venues are taking shape and the organisation is making <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Media/?articleNewsGroup=-1&amp;articleId=93762">solid progress</a>, but the question is are you ready for 2012? With the 2012 Games fast approaching, now is the time to start planning your role and your summer of 2012. Would you like to attend an Olympic event? Then <a href="http://www.tickets.london2012.com/?camefrom=CFC_UK_LONDON2012_L2012_SIGNUPSPLASH">sign up for ticketing information</a>. Thinking about volunteering? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/volunteering">Sign up for more information</a>. Perhaps attend an event during the Cultural Olympiad? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/cultural-olympiad/index.php">Find out more</a>. See the Olympic Torch Relay? It’s coming <a href="http://www.london2012.com/blog/2010/05/london-2012-torch-relay-bringing-the-games-to-your-doors.php">to a town near you</a>! Maybe create something and be <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/inspire-programme/index.php">part of the inspire programme</a>? Or teach children using the Games to inspire them? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/education/index.php">It’s all here</a>. There are numerous ways that you can play a part in 2012, start thinking and planning what you want to do now, so that you don’t miss out.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1280233140) } [5]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(24) "London 2012 Open Weekend" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(3036) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">On 27 July, London 2012 will be celebrating two years-to-go until the start of its Olympic Games. In advance of this significant date, London 2012 is running its annual <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/open-weekend/index.php">Open Weekend</a> event, which is a UK-wide celebration taking place from 23 till 25 July. The event includes over 800 events across the country ranging from sport to art, dance to exhibitions, and each event features a special challenge: <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/upcoming-events/index.php?age=openweekend&amp;owd1=yes&amp;owd2=yes&amp;owd3=yes&amp;regionfilter=&amp;typefilter=&amp;q=&amp;x=26&amp;y=11">What will you do this weekend?</a></p> <h5>“Challenge Yourself”</h5> <p>The 2010 Open Weekend is based on the theme of “<a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/london-2012-open-weekend-2010.php">challenge yourself</a>”, with organisations setting public challenges at their events. This will allow everyone across the UK to attempt to set a new personal best by trying something new or by taking an existing interest to the next level. <a href="http://www.london2012.com/about-us/the-people-delivering-the-games/the-london-organising-committee/locog-board.php">LOCOG Chairman Seb Coe</a> had this to say about the Open Weekend, “Open Weekend will lead the nation into the two-year countdown to the start of the London 2012 Games, with new personal bests being set right across the UK. Open Weekend 2010 is another opportunity for thousands of people to join in with the London 2012 Games.”</p> <h5>Solid Progress<br /></h5> <p>With a little over two years to go until the Games begin, London 2012 is continuing to <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Media/?articleNewsGroup=-1&amp;articleId=93762">make solid progress on its preparations</a> for the Games, according to the International <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Commissions/Coordination-commissions--Olympic-Games1/?Tab=1">Olympic Committee’s (IOC) Coordination Commission</a>, which visited London only a few weeks ago. The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) has also recently <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/07/london-2012-venues-on-track-to-be-finished-next-year.php">unveiled a new set of milestones</a>, which outline how, by summer 2011, the structures of the main venues for London 2012 will be complete and ready to be handed over for testing, with all major new infrastructure finished and landscaping work well advanced across the Olympic Park. </p> <h5>LONDON 2012<br /></h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting, taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(20) "7/23/2010 3:30:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=94706" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(3036) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">On 27 July, London 2012 will be celebrating two years-to-go until the start of its Olympic Games. In advance of this significant date, London 2012 is running its annual <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/open-weekend/index.php">Open Weekend</a> event, which is a UK-wide celebration taking place from 23 till 25 July. The event includes over 800 events across the country ranging from sport to art, dance to exhibitions, and each event features a special challenge: <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/upcoming-events/index.php?age=openweekend&amp;owd1=yes&amp;owd2=yes&amp;owd3=yes&amp;regionfilter=&amp;typefilter=&amp;q=&amp;x=26&amp;y=11">What will you do this weekend?</a></p> <h5>“Challenge Yourself”</h5> <p>The 2010 Open Weekend is based on the theme of “<a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/london-2012-open-weekend-2010.php">challenge yourself</a>”, with organisations setting public challenges at their events. This will allow everyone across the UK to attempt to set a new personal best by trying something new or by taking an existing interest to the next level. <a href="http://www.london2012.com/about-us/the-people-delivering-the-games/the-london-organising-committee/locog-board.php">LOCOG Chairman Seb Coe</a> had this to say about the Open Weekend, “Open Weekend will lead the nation into the two-year countdown to the start of the London 2012 Games, with new personal bests being set right across the UK. Open Weekend 2010 is another opportunity for thousands of people to join in with the London 2012 Games.”</p> <h5>Solid Progress<br /></h5> <p>With a little over two years to go until the Games begin, London 2012 is continuing to <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Media/?articleNewsGroup=-1&amp;articleId=93762">make solid progress on its preparations</a> for the Games, according to the International <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Commissions/Coordination-commissions--Olympic-Games1/?Tab=1">Olympic Committee’s (IOC) Coordination Commission</a>, which visited London only a few weeks ago. The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) has also recently <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/07/london-2012-venues-on-track-to-be-finished-next-year.php">unveiled a new set of milestones</a>, which outline how, by summer 2011, the structures of the main venues for London 2012 will be complete and ready to be handed over for testing, with all major new infrastructure finished and landscaping work well advanced across the Olympic Park. </p> <h5>LONDON 2012<br /></h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting, taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1279899000) } [6]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(41) "London 2012 Announces Volunteer Programme" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(3620) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) has announced its plans to recruit up to 70,000 volunteers or “Games Makers” for the London Games. It is expected to be the biggest volunteer recruitment campaign in the post-war period in the UK, and LOCOG will be looking for dedicated and inspirational people representative of the diversity of London and the UK to apply for a wide variety of volunteer positions. <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Sponsoring/Sponsorship/McDonalds/">Olympic TOP partner McDonald’s</a> will be the presenting partner of the London volunteer programme and will use its expertise in customer service and training and its nationwide presence to help attract, select and train the diverse team that will be needed to make the 2012 Games a success.</p> <h5>Games Makers</h5> <p><a href="http://www.london2012.com/about-us/the-people-delivering-the-games/the-london-organising-committee/locog-board.php">Sebastian Coe</a>, Chairman of <a href="http://www.london2012.com/">LOCOG</a>, said: “London 2012 needs brilliant volunteers to help us deliver a great Olympic and Paralympic Games. Our volunteers will be called Games Makers to reflect the important role they will play in staging the 2012 Games. The programme to find our Games Makers will launch on 27 July 2010 and I urge anyone who is interested to come to our website to find out everything they need to know about volunteering in 2012.”</p> <h5>Different Roles<br /></h5> <p>There are two different types of volunteer role: specialists in areas such as medical services, sport or press operations; and generalists, with roles ranging from spectator assistants, uniform distributors and ticket checking. In addition to the LOCOG volunteers, the Mayor of London will shortly announce plans for the recruitment of city volunteers to be stationed at key transport hubs, at visitor attractions, and on the streets of the capital to make sure all visitors to London get the best possible welcome during the Games.&nbsp; </p> <h5>Key Dates<br /></h5> <p>Volunteer recruitment will start exactly two years before the London Games on 27 July 2010. The key dates for the process are:<br /><br />•&nbsp;27 July 2010: applications open for pre-identified applicants for specialist sport, press operations, anti-doping and medical roles and members of a wide range of disability specialist organisations. This is also an opportunity for those interested in the generalist roles to find out if they have what it takes to be a <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/volunteering/index.php">Games Maker via a dedicated section on the London 2012 website</a>. Recruitment also starts on this date for the Mayor’s London Volunteers scheme.<br /><br />•&nbsp;15 September 2010: applications open to the public for generalist roles and continue for specialist roles.<br /><br />•&nbsp;LOCOG today also confirmed that up to 1,500 of the Games Maker roles will be made available for those under the age of 18 through the ‘Young Games Maker’ programme that will be unveiled in July 2011.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012<br /></h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(21) "7/12/2010 11:30:00 AM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=94172" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(3620) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) has announced its plans to recruit up to 70,000 volunteers or “Games Makers” for the London Games. It is expected to be the biggest volunteer recruitment campaign in the post-war period in the UK, and LOCOG will be looking for dedicated and inspirational people representative of the diversity of London and the UK to apply for a wide variety of volunteer positions. <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Sponsoring/Sponsorship/McDonalds/">Olympic TOP partner McDonald’s</a> will be the presenting partner of the London volunteer programme and will use its expertise in customer service and training and its nationwide presence to help attract, select and train the diverse team that will be needed to make the 2012 Games a success.</p> <h5>Games Makers</h5> <p><a href="http://www.london2012.com/about-us/the-people-delivering-the-games/the-london-organising-committee/locog-board.php">Sebastian Coe</a>, Chairman of <a href="http://www.london2012.com/">LOCOG</a>, said: “London 2012 needs brilliant volunteers to help us deliver a great Olympic and Paralympic Games. Our volunteers will be called Games Makers to reflect the important role they will play in staging the 2012 Games. The programme to find our Games Makers will launch on 27 July 2010 and I urge anyone who is interested to come to our website to find out everything they need to know about volunteering in 2012.”</p> <h5>Different Roles<br /></h5> <p>There are two different types of volunteer role: specialists in areas such as medical services, sport or press operations; and generalists, with roles ranging from spectator assistants, uniform distributors and ticket checking. In addition to the LOCOG volunteers, the Mayor of London will shortly announce plans for the recruitment of city volunteers to be stationed at key transport hubs, at visitor attractions, and on the streets of the capital to make sure all visitors to London get the best possible welcome during the Games.&nbsp; </p> <h5>Key Dates<br /></h5> <p>Volunteer recruitment will start exactly two years before the London Games on 27 July 2010. The key dates for the process are:<br /><br />•&nbsp;27 July 2010: applications open for pre-identified applicants for specialist sport, press operations, anti-doping and medical roles and members of a wide range of disability specialist organisations. This is also an opportunity for those interested in the generalist roles to find out if they have what it takes to be a <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/volunteering/index.php">Games Maker via a dedicated section on the London 2012 website</a>. Recruitment also starts on this date for the Mayor’s London Volunteers scheme.<br /><br />•&nbsp;15 September 2010: applications open to the public for generalist roles and continue for specialist roles.<br /><br />•&nbsp;LOCOG today also confirmed that up to 1,500 of the Games Maker roles will be made available for those under the age of 18 through the ‘Young Games Maker’ programme that will be unveiled in July 2011.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012<br /></h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1278934200) } [7]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(45) "Solid progress continues with two years to go" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(4276) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Commissions/Coordination-commissions--Olympic-Games1/?Tab=1">Coordination Commission for the London 2012 Games</a> concluded today its sixth visit to the British capital since the city was awarded the Games in 2005. The meetings, which ran from 6 to 8 July, saw good progress being made across the project, particularly in the area of venue and infrastructure construction. The week’s meetings began with <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Members/Count-Jacques-ROGGE/">IOC President Jacques Rogge</a> and <a href="http://www.olympic.org/content/The-IOC/Members/Mr-Denis-OSWALD/">Coordination Commission Chairman Denis Oswald</a> meeting the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson, as well as the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, at No.10 Downing Street. </p> <h5>Completely Behind The Project </h5> <p><font size="2">“We held very constructive talks with Prime Minister Cameron and Mayor Johnson about the upcoming Games, and we are assured that the government at all levels remains completely behind the project,” said Oswald. “We also realise that we are working in a difficult economic environment at the moment, but we are confident that LOCOG’s early entry into the market and its robust private sector financing will mean that the delivery of top class Games will not be affected.”</font></p> <h5>Visits And Reports</h5> <p><font size="2">During its stay, the Commission visited </font><a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/index.php"><font size="2">a number of the Olympic venues</font></a><font size="2">, including the Olympic Park, Olympic Village, Broxbourne, Excel, and Royal Holloway, and heard reports from the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) on the progress being made in preparing the services for a number of Games participants, such as the athletes, media, spectators, National Olympic Committees and International Federations, as well as in areas like technology, medical services, commercial, transport, communications, marketing, culture, ceremonies and education. LOCOG also updated the Commission on its plans for the </font><a href="http://www.tickets.london2012.com/?camefrom=CFC_UK_LONDON2012_L2012_SIGNUPSPLASH"><font size="2">ticketing</font></a><font size="2">, volunteer and Olympic Torch Relay programmes, which will be rolled out over the coming two years. </font></p> <h5>Operational Testing Phase</h5> <p><font size="2">With the Games a little over two years away, </font><a href="http://www.london2012.com/"><font size="2">London 2012</font></a><font size="2"> is now approaching a crucial stage in its development as it shifts from the planning stage into its operational testing phase. “The staff at LOCOG is top class and has been key to the success of the project so far. And there have been many successes, including the great advances in construction, in particular at the Olympic Park,” Oswald said. “They have done an exemplary job so far, but now is not the time for complacency; they need to continue working diligently and to focus on the details of the project during the upcoming operational testing phase in order to put on great Games in 2012.” In the next 18 months, LOCOG will run numerous tests to determine that everything is in place to smoothly deliver the Games. It is at this stage that the local organisers will determine where improvements can be made and calibrate their plans accordingly. The Commission said it was impressed with the work completed to date and was looking forward to seeing LOCOG and its partners’ plans put to the test and refined over the coming months.</font></p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p><font size="2">London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</font></p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(19) "7/8/2010 4:30:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=93762" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(4276) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Commissions/Coordination-commissions--Olympic-Games1/?Tab=1">Coordination Commission for the London 2012 Games</a> concluded today its sixth visit to the British capital since the city was awarded the Games in 2005. The meetings, which ran from 6 to 8 July, saw good progress being made across the project, particularly in the area of venue and infrastructure construction. The week’s meetings began with <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Members/Count-Jacques-ROGGE/">IOC President Jacques Rogge</a> and <a href="http://www.olympic.org/content/The-IOC/Members/Mr-Denis-OSWALD/">Coordination Commission Chairman Denis Oswald</a> meeting the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson, as well as the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, at No.10 Downing Street. </p> <h5>Completely Behind The Project </h5> <p><font size="2">“We held very constructive talks with Prime Minister Cameron and Mayor Johnson about the upcoming Games, and we are assured that the government at all levels remains completely behind the project,” said Oswald. “We also realise that we are working in a difficult economic environment at the moment, but we are confident that LOCOG’s early entry into the market and its robust private sector financing will mean that the delivery of top class Games will not be affected.”</font></p> <h5>Visits And Reports</h5> <p><font size="2">During its stay, the Commission visited </font><a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/index.php"><font size="2">a number of the Olympic venues</font></a><font size="2">, including the Olympic Park, Olympic Village, Broxbourne, Excel, and Royal Holloway, and heard reports from the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) on the progress being made in preparing the services for a number of Games participants, such as the athletes, media, spectators, National Olympic Committees and International Federations, as well as in areas like technology, medical services, commercial, transport, communications, marketing, culture, ceremonies and education. LOCOG also updated the Commission on its plans for the </font><a href="http://www.tickets.london2012.com/?camefrom=CFC_UK_LONDON2012_L2012_SIGNUPSPLASH"><font size="2">ticketing</font></a><font size="2">, volunteer and Olympic Torch Relay programmes, which will be rolled out over the coming two years. </font></p> <h5>Operational Testing Phase</h5> <p><font size="2">With the Games a little over two years away, </font><a href="http://www.london2012.com/"><font size="2">London 2012</font></a><font size="2"> is now approaching a crucial stage in its development as it shifts from the planning stage into its operational testing phase. “The staff at LOCOG is top class and has been key to the success of the project so far. And there have been many successes, including the great advances in construction, in particular at the Olympic Park,” Oswald said. “They have done an exemplary job so far, but now is not the time for complacency; they need to continue working diligently and to focus on the details of the project during the upcoming operational testing phase in order to put on great Games in 2012.” In the next 18 months, LOCOG will run numerous tests to determine that everything is in place to smoothly deliver the Games. It is at this stage that the local organisers will determine where improvements can be made and calibrate their plans accordingly. The Commission said it was impressed with the work completed to date and was looking forward to seeing LOCOG and its partners’ plans put to the test and refined over the coming months.</font></p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p><font size="2">London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</font></p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1278606600) } [8]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(115) "[PRESS RELEASE] New government maintains all-party support for Games as solid progress continues with 2 years to go" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(6377) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s Coordination Commission for the London 2012 Games concluded today its sixth visit to the British capital since the city was awarded the Games in 2005. The meetings, which ran from 6 to 8 July, saw good progress being made across the project, particularly in the area of venue and infrastructure construction. The week’s meetings began with IOC President Jacques Rogge and Coordination Commission Chairman Denis Oswald meeting the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson, as well as the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, at No.10 Downing Street. </p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">“We held very constructive talks with Prime Minister Cameron and Mayor Johnson about the upcoming Games, and we are assured that the government at all levels remains completely behind the project,” said Oswald. “We also realise that we are working in a difficult economic environment at the moment, but we are confident that LOCOG’s early entry into the market and its robust private sector financing will mean that the delivery of top class Games will not be affected.”</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office"/?><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">London 2012 Chairman Sebastian Coe said, "This week, we have taken the IOC through the progress we are making across both the Olympic and Paralympic Games, and we are delighted with their very positive report. With two years to go, our focus is very much on working through the details of delivering this large and complex project. There will of course be challenges ahead, but we have an excellent team in place, and we benefit from great partnerships with the government, the Mayor of London, our sponsors and, of course, both the British Olympic Association and the British Paralympic Association. The strength of this team, combined with the tremendous support of the public, will help us work through any challenges and deliver&nbsp;Olympic and Paralympic Games we will all be proud of in 2012."</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">During its stay, the Commission visited a number of the Olympic venues, including the Olympic Park, Olympic Village, Broxbourne, Excel, and Royal Holloway, and heard reports from the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) on the progress being made in preparing the services for a number of Games participants, such as the athletes, media, spectators, National Olympic Committees and International Federations, as well as in areas like technology, medical services, commercial, transport, communications, marketing, culture, ceremonies and education. LOCOG also updated the Commission on its plans for the ticketing, volunteer and Olympic Torch Relay programmes, which will be rolled out over the coming two years. </span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">With the Games a little over two years away, London 2012 is now approaching a crucial stage in its development as it shifts from the planning stage into its operational testing phase.</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">“The staff at LOCOG is top class and has been key to the success of the project so far. And there have been many successes, including the great advances in construction, in particular at the Olympic Park,” Oswald said. “They have done an exemplary job so far, but now is not the time for complacency; they need to continue working diligently and to focus on the details of the project during the up-coming operational testing phase in order to put on great Games in 2012.”</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p class="iocCopyNoSpacing">In the next 18 months, LOCOG will run numerous tests to determine that everything is in place to smoothly deliver the Games. It is at this stage that the local organisers will determine where improvements can be made and calibrate their plans accordingly. The Commission said it was impressed with the work completed to date and was looking forward to seeing LOCOG and its partners’ plans put to the test and refined over the coming months.</p> <p class="iocCopyIntro"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-font-family: Arial; mso-fareast-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-fareast-language: EN-US; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA"></span>&nbsp;</p> <p align="center">###</p> <p><font size="2">For more information, please contact the IOC Communications Department: <br />Tel: +41 21 621 6000 e-mail: </font><a href="mailto:pressoffice@olympic.org"><font size="2">pressoffice@olympic.org</font></a></p> <p><font size="2"><strong>Videos</strong><br />Broadcast quality videos can be accessed and downloaded for free: <a href="http://www.videoforum2.afp.com/VideoForum/AuthFiles/login.aspx">click here</a> <br />Login: IOC<br />Password: MEDIA2009 <br />YouTube: </font><a href="http://www.youtube.com/iocmedia"><font size="2">www.youtube.com/iocmedia</font></a><font size="2"> <br />&nbsp; <br /><strong>Photos</strong><br />For an extensive selection of photos available shortly after each event, please follow us on <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/iocmedia">Flickr</a>.<br />To request archive photos and footage, please contact our Images team at: </font><a href="mailto:images@olympic.org"><font size="2">images@olympic.org</font></a><font size="2">.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><strong>Social media</strong><br />For up-to-the-minute information on the IOC and regular updates, please follow us on <a href="http://twitter.com/olympics">Twitter</a> and <a href="http://www.facebook.com/olympicgames">Facebook</a>.</font></p> <p><font size="2"><br />&nbsp;</font></p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(19) "7/8/2010 4:00:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=93761" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(6377) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s Coordination Commission for the London 2012 Games concluded today its sixth visit to the British capital since the city was awarded the Games in 2005. The meetings, which ran from 6 to 8 July, saw good progress being made across the project, particularly in the area of venue and infrastructure construction. The week’s meetings began with IOC President Jacques Rogge and Coordination Commission Chairman Denis Oswald meeting the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson, as well as the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, at No.10 Downing Street. </p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">“We held very constructive talks with Prime Minister Cameron and Mayor Johnson about the upcoming Games, and we are assured that the government at all levels remains completely behind the project,” said Oswald. “We also realise that we are working in a difficult economic environment at the moment, but we are confident that LOCOG’s early entry into the market and its robust private sector financing will mean that the delivery of top class Games will not be affected.”</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office"/?><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">London 2012 Chairman Sebastian Coe said, "This week, we have taken the IOC through the progress we are making across both the Olympic and Paralympic Games, and we are delighted with their very positive report. With two years to go, our focus is very much on working through the details of delivering this large and complex project. There will of course be challenges ahead, but we have an excellent team in place, and we benefit from great partnerships with the government, the Mayor of London, our sponsors and, of course, both the British Olympic Association and the British Paralympic Association. The strength of this team, combined with the tremendous support of the public, will help us work through any challenges and deliver&nbsp;Olympic and Paralympic Games we will all be proud of in 2012."</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">During its stay, the Commission visited a number of the Olympic venues, including the Olympic Park, Olympic Village, Broxbourne, Excel, and Royal Holloway, and heard reports from the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) on the progress being made in preparing the services for a number of Games participants, such as the athletes, media, spectators, National Olympic Committees and International Federations, as well as in areas like technology, medical services, commercial, transport, communications, marketing, culture, ceremonies and education. LOCOG also updated the Commission on its plans for the ticketing, volunteer and Olympic Torch Relay programmes, which will be rolled out over the coming two years. </span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">With the Games a little over two years away, London 2012 is now approaching a crucial stage in its development as it shifts from the planning stage into its operational testing phase.</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">“The staff at LOCOG is top class and has been key to the success of the project so far. And there have been many successes, including the great advances in construction, in particular at the Olympic Park,” Oswald said. “They have done an exemplary job so far, but now is not the time for complacency; they need to continue working diligently and to focus on the details of the project during the up-coming operational testing phase in order to put on great Games in 2012.”</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p class="iocCopyNoSpacing">In the next 18 months, LOCOG will run numerous tests to determine that everything is in place to smoothly deliver the Games. It is at this stage that the local organisers will determine where improvements can be made and calibrate their plans accordingly. The Commission said it was impressed with the work completed to date and was looking forward to seeing LOCOG and its partners’ plans put to the test and refined over the coming months.</p> <p class="iocCopyIntro"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-font-family: Arial; mso-fareast-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-fareast-language: EN-US; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA"></span>&nbsp;</p> <p align="center">###</p> <p><font size="2">For more information, please contact the IOC Communications Department: <br />Tel: +41 21 621 6000 e-mail: </font><a href="mailto:pressoffice@olympic.org"><font size="2">pressoffice@olympic.org</font></a></p> <p><font size="2"><strong>Videos</strong><br />Broadcast quality videos can be accessed and downloaded for free: <a href="http://www.videoforum2.afp.com/VideoForum/AuthFiles/login.aspx">click here</a> <br />Login: IOC<br />Password: MEDIA2009 <br />YouTube: </font><a href="http://www.youtube.com/iocmedia"><font size="2">www.youtube.com/iocmedia</font></a><font size="2"> <br />&nbsp; <br /><strong>Photos</strong><br />For an extensive selection of photos available shortly after each event, please follow us on <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/iocmedia">Flickr</a>.<br />To request archive photos and footage, please contact our Images team at: </font><a href="mailto:images@olympic.org"><font size="2">images@olympic.org</font></a><font size="2">.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><strong>Social media</strong><br />For up-to-the-minute information on the IOC and regular updates, please follow us on <a href="http://twitter.com/olympics">Twitter</a> and <a href="http://www.facebook.com/olympicgames">Facebook</a>.</font></p> <p><font size="2"><br />&nbsp;</font></p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1278604800) } [9]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(57) "[PRESS RELEASE] IOC President Visits No.10 Downing Street" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(3108) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">Jacques Rogge, the President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), met with the new British Prime Minister David Cameron at No.10 Downing Street today. The visit to see the new British leader was part of a full day of Olympic events for the President in the next Olympic host city. </p> <p>He started the day by addressing London 2012’s staff, before going on to visit the Olympic Park venues and later met the Mayor of London Boris Johnson. </p> <p>Following his meeting with Prime Minister Cameron, President Rogge said, “We had very productive discussions with the Prime Minister and the Mayor about the London 2012 Games and the development of sport in the UK. It is a sign of the government's commitment to the 2012 Games that such a meeting was organised so early in the life of the new government. The Prime Minister reassured me of the government’s continued support for London 2012 and we are looking forward to continuing the bi-partisan approach so vital to a successful Games. LOCOG and the ODA have done amazing things, and huge progress has been made - as we enter the crucial final delivery&nbsp; phase. But we are confident, not complacent. LOCOG and the ODA are doing a great job in what are tough financial circumstances - and we all continue to ensure we make intelligent use of available resources."<br /><br />The meeting with the British Prime Minister at No.10 Downing Street also included Olympic sport leaders Lord Moynihan, Lord Coe, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson.</p> <p>Speaking after the meeting Sebastian Coe, Chairman of LOCOG, the organisers of London 2012, added, "The meetings today demonstrate the commitment the Government and the Mayor have to delivering a great Games that will energise the country.&nbsp; Every day we focus on hosting a Games that delivers pride and value for&nbsp;money to the nation and we look forward to taking the IOC through the progress we are making right across this project over the next few days."</p> <p>As part of the Olympic Park visit, Rogge helped to put in place the 2012th seat in the Olympic Stadium. The President was assisted in his task by the Chairman of the IOC’s Coordination Commission Denis Oswald, Chairman of London 2012 Sebastian Coe, IOC member Craig Reedie and some of the children who were present in Singapore for&nbsp;the 2012 vote. In a little over two years' time, these seats will be where thousands of spectators will be able to watch the world’s best athletes compete.</p> <p>At a meeting later in the day with Mayor Boris Johnson, President Rogge was able to listen to the Mayor's plans to energise the capital and its people in the run-up to, during, and after the Games of 2012. </p> <p>President Jacques Rogge also visited the headquarters of the British Olympic Association (BOA) in central London.&nbsp; While at the BOA,&nbsp;Rogge met with BOA Chairman Colin Moynihan, Chief Executive Andy Hunt and members of the BOA Board to review Team GB’s preparation and the sports legacy plans for the London 2012 Olympic Games.</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(19) "7/5/2010 7:50:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=93533" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(3108) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">Jacques Rogge, the President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), met with the new British Prime Minister David Cameron at No.10 Downing Street today. The visit to see the new British leader was part of a full day of Olympic events for the President in the next Olympic host city. </p> <p>He started the day by addressing London 2012’s staff, before going on to visit the Olympic Park venues and later met the Mayor of London Boris Johnson. </p> <p>Following his meeting with Prime Minister Cameron, President Rogge said, “We had very productive discussions with the Prime Minister and the Mayor about the London 2012 Games and the development of sport in the UK. It is a sign of the government's commitment to the 2012 Games that such a meeting was organised so early in the life of the new government. The Prime Minister reassured me of the government’s continued support for London 2012 and we are looking forward to continuing the bi-partisan approach so vital to a successful Games. LOCOG and the ODA have done amazing things, and huge progress has been made - as we enter the crucial final delivery&nbsp; phase. But we are confident, not complacent. LOCOG and the ODA are doing a great job in what are tough financial circumstances - and we all continue to ensure we make intelligent use of available resources."<br /><br />The meeting with the British Prime Minister at No.10 Downing Street also included Olympic sport leaders Lord Moynihan, Lord Coe, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson.</p> <p>Speaking after the meeting Sebastian Coe, Chairman of LOCOG, the organisers of London 2012, added, "The meetings today demonstrate the commitment the Government and the Mayor have to delivering a great Games that will energise the country.&nbsp; Every day we focus on hosting a Games that delivers pride and value for&nbsp;money to the nation and we look forward to taking the IOC through the progress we are making right across this project over the next few days."</p> <p>As part of the Olympic Park visit, Rogge helped to put in place the 2012th seat in the Olympic Stadium. The President was assisted in his task by the Chairman of the IOC’s Coordination Commission Denis Oswald, Chairman of London 2012 Sebastian Coe, IOC member Craig Reedie and some of the children who were present in Singapore for&nbsp;the 2012 vote. In a little over two years' time, these seats will be where thousands of spectators will be able to watch the world’s best athletes compete.</p> <p>At a meeting later in the day with Mayor Boris Johnson, President Rogge was able to listen to the Mayor's plans to energise the capital and its people in the run-up to, during, and after the Games of 2012. </p> <p>President Jacques Rogge also visited the headquarters of the British Olympic Association (BOA) in central London.&nbsp; While at the BOA,&nbsp;Rogge met with BOA Chairman Colin Moynihan, Chief Executive Andy Hunt and members of the BOA Board to review Team GB’s preparation and the sports legacy plans for the London 2012 Olympic Games.</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1278359400) } } ["channel"]=> array(14) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(38) "International Olympic Committee : News" ["link#"]=> int(1) ["link"]=> string(75) "http://www.olympic.org/rss/feed.aspx?Language=en&NewsPage=29&Aggregate=true" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(65) "WWW.OLYMPIC.ORG - Official website of the Olympic Movement - News" ["copyright#"]=> int(1) ["copyright"]=> string(35) "Copyright CIO. 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class="iocCopyIntro">The Organising Committee for the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games has launched a nationwide competition in Russia to design the mascot for the Sochi Olympic Games. The competition will run from 1 September till 5 December 2010, and participants can submit their ideas through <a href="http://talisman.sochi2014.ru/">a special web portal</a> (in Russian only) or by mail. An expert jury, made-up of filmmakers, animators, artists, cultural workers, professional marketers and athletes, will then create a shortlist of finalists. The winning design will be decided on 7 February 2011 through a public SMS and telephone vote. The winner will receive two tickets to the Opening Ceremony of the Games.</p> <h5>A long history of Olympic mascots</h5> <p>The first official Olympic mascot - Waldi the dachshund - was launched on the occasion of the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Summer/Munich-1972/">1972 Olympic Games in Munich</a>, although an unofficial mascot called "Schuss" had appeared at the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Winter/Grenoble-1968/">1968 Winter Games in Grenoble</a>. Since that time, the mascot has become a regular feature at the Games appearing alone or with friends and taking not only animal forms but also those of traditional dolls and even an ice cube and a piece of snow. The latest mascot to join this special Olympic family is <a href="http://www.mylondon2012.com/mascots/">Wenlock</a>, who will be welcoming fans to London in 2012.&nbsp;</p> <h5>Sochi 2014</h5> <p><a href="http://www.sochi2014.ru">Sochi</a> was elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala City on 4 July 2007. Sochi won the vote against the cities of Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea) in the second round of voting. The Russian city edged out PyeongChang 51 votes to 47, with Salzburg having been eliminated in round one. The Sochi Games will play host to the seven Olympic Winter sports currently on the Olympic programme and will run from 7 to 23 February 2014.</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(19) "9/2/2010 9:53:00 AM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=99082" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(2156) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The Organising Committee for the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games has launched a nationwide competition in Russia to design the mascot for the Sochi Olympic Games. The competition will run from 1 September till 5 December 2010, and participants can submit their ideas through <a href="http://talisman.sochi2014.ru/">a special web portal</a> (in Russian only) or by mail. An expert jury, made-up of filmmakers, animators, artists, cultural workers, professional marketers and athletes, will then create a shortlist of finalists. The winning design will be decided on 7 February 2011 through a public SMS and telephone vote. The winner will receive two tickets to the Opening Ceremony of the Games.</p> <h5>A long history of Olympic mascots</h5> <p>The first official Olympic mascot - Waldi the dachshund - was launched on the occasion of the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Summer/Munich-1972/">1972 Olympic Games in Munich</a>, although an unofficial mascot called "Schuss" had appeared at the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Winter/Grenoble-1968/">1968 Winter Games in Grenoble</a>. Since that time, the mascot has become a regular feature at the Games appearing alone or with friends and taking not only animal forms but also those of traditional dolls and even an ice cube and a piece of snow. The latest mascot to join this special Olympic family is <a href="http://www.mylondon2012.com/mascots/">Wenlock</a>, who will be welcoming fans to London in 2012.&nbsp;</p> <h5>Sochi 2014</h5> <p><a href="http://www.sochi2014.ru">Sochi</a> was elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala City on 4 July 2007. Sochi won the vote against the cities of Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea) in the second round of voting. The Russian city edged out PyeongChang 51 votes to 47, with Salzburg having been eliminated in round one. The Sochi Games will play host to the seven Olympic Winter sports currently on the Olympic programme and will run from 7 to 23 February 2014.</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1283421180) } [1]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(47) "A lovely, moving donation to The Olympic Museum" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(1481) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">Recently, at The Olympic Museum, we welcomed two lovely champions: Stéphane Lambiel, the Swiss skater with an impressive record (twice world champion, twice European runner-up, silver medallist in Turin in 2006, and bronze medallist in the world championships); and Joannie Rochette, the talented Canadian skater who won a bronze medal in Vancouver last February, and who courageously competed in the events only two days after the sudden death of her mother.</p> <p>These two young athletes came to make a donation to The Olympic Museum: Lambiel donated the zebra-striped suit he wore when he won the Olympic silver medal, and Rochette donated the first dress she wore in her Olympic short programme.</p> <p>Olympic Museum Curator Frédérique Jamolli welcomed the young athletes and recalled how their performances, be it in Turin or Vancouver, had enthused and excited the general public, whom they had both won over.</p> <p>Stéphane Lambiel and Joannie Rochette then received the Olympic Museum’s traditional donor’s certificate and signed the guest book. They both said that it was both a pleasure and an honour to make their donations, in the hope that these two outfits would provoke the same emotions in the visitors as they had felt themselves.<br /></p><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/8_9kMwtPUY8?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US" width="540" height="328" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always"></embed>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(20) "8/30/2010 4:32:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=97755" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(1481) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">Recently, at The Olympic Museum, we welcomed two lovely champions: Stéphane Lambiel, the Swiss skater with an impressive record (twice world champion, twice European runner-up, silver medallist in Turin in 2006, and bronze medallist in the world championships); and Joannie Rochette, the talented Canadian skater who won a bronze medal in Vancouver last February, and who courageously competed in the events only two days after the sudden death of her mother.</p> <p>These two young athletes came to make a donation to The Olympic Museum: Lambiel donated the zebra-striped suit he wore when he won the Olympic silver medal, and Rochette donated the first dress she wore in her Olympic short programme.</p> <p>Olympic Museum Curator Frédérique Jamolli welcomed the young athletes and recalled how their performances, be it in Turin or Vancouver, had enthused and excited the general public, whom they had both won over.</p> <p>Stéphane Lambiel and Joannie Rochette then received the Olympic Museum’s traditional donor’s certificate and signed the guest book. They both said that it was both a pleasure and an honour to make their donations, in the hope that these two outfits would provoke the same emotions in the visitors as they had felt themselves.<br /></p><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/8_9kMwtPUY8?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US" width="540" height="328" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always"></embed>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1283185920) } [2]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(29) "London 2012 Venues Take Shape" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(4071) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">With a little under two years to go, the London 2012 venues are rapidly taking shape, as water is now flowing at the canoe slalom venue, the seating structure is taking shape at the basketball arena, ground preparation work is beginning at Greenwich Park, and landscaping work is getting underway at the Olympic Village. With athletes and teams now in the process of qualifying for the 2012 Games, this progress is a reassuring sign that London is on time and on track to welcome the world’s top sports people in 2012.</p> <h5>Water Works</h5> <p>Construction work on the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/water-flowing-at-london-2012-canoe-slalom-venue.php">new lake and competition courses</a> has been completed at the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/lee-valley-white-water-centre.php">London 2012 canoe slalom venue</a> in the <a href="http://www.leevalleypark.org.uk/en/content/cms/white_water_canoe_ce/white_water_canoe_ce.aspx">Lee Valley Regional Park</a> and this has allowed <a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/lee-valley-white-water-centre.php">water to start flowing</a> at the venue, so that the courses can be tested. The venue is expected to be completed later this year and will include a standard 300m competition course, a boat conveyor, a 160m intermediate/training course, a 10,000m² finish lake, and a facility building and pumping house.</p> <h5>Capacity of 12,000</h5> <p><a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/london-2012-basketball-arena-prepares-for-seat-installation.php">Thousands of seats</a> are soon to be installed in the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/basketball-arena.php">London 2012 basketball arena</a>, which is reported to be one of the largest temporary venues ever used for an Olympic and Paralympic Games. The seating structure is now taking shape, before the black and orange seats – representing the colours of a basketball – are put into place. At Games-time, the venue will host basketball, handball, wheelchair basketball, and wheelchair rugby.</p> <h5>Preparing The Ground</h5> <p>Work has begun on preparing the ground at Greenwich Park, the site of <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/greenwich-park.php">London’s Olympic equestrian venue</a>. The work, which will be carried out by London 2012 sub-contractors in association with The Royal Parks, will ensure that the condition of the grass is ideal for <a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2009/equestrian-stars-tour-greenwich-park.php">the competitors in 2012</a>. <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/greenwich-park-ground-preparation-work-begins-for-2012.php">Work will include irrigation, de-compaction, mowing, and some other enhancements</a>. The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) has also announced <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/athletes-village-to-feature-new-green-spaces.php">plans for thousands of new trees, parks, play areas, and open spaces</a> to support the new homes being delivered in the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/olympic-village.php">London 2012 Olympic Village</a>. Landscaping is already underway for the creation of an extensive wetlands area on the Village site, with the overall plans for these green spaces&nbsp;adding to the landscaping works already underway in the Olympic Park site, which is creating one of the largest new urban parks in the UK for over 100 years.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p>London was elected as the host city for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p> <p>Want to get involved in London 2012? How about <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/volunteer/index.php">volunteering</a>?</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(21) "8/24/2010 12:00:00 AM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=97649" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(4071) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">With a little under two years to go, the London 2012 venues are rapidly taking shape, as water is now flowing at the canoe slalom venue, the seating structure is taking shape at the basketball arena, ground preparation work is beginning at Greenwich Park, and landscaping work is getting underway at the Olympic Village. With athletes and teams now in the process of qualifying for the 2012 Games, this progress is a reassuring sign that London is on time and on track to welcome the world’s top sports people in 2012.</p> <h5>Water Works</h5> <p>Construction work on the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/water-flowing-at-london-2012-canoe-slalom-venue.php">new lake and competition courses</a> has been completed at the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/lee-valley-white-water-centre.php">London 2012 canoe slalom venue</a> in the <a href="http://www.leevalleypark.org.uk/en/content/cms/white_water_canoe_ce/white_water_canoe_ce.aspx">Lee Valley Regional Park</a> and this has allowed <a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/lee-valley-white-water-centre.php">water to start flowing</a> at the venue, so that the courses can be tested. The venue is expected to be completed later this year and will include a standard 300m competition course, a boat conveyor, a 160m intermediate/training course, a 10,000m² finish lake, and a facility building and pumping house.</p> <h5>Capacity of 12,000</h5> <p><a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/london-2012-basketball-arena-prepares-for-seat-installation.php">Thousands of seats</a> are soon to be installed in the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/basketball-arena.php">London 2012 basketball arena</a>, which is reported to be one of the largest temporary venues ever used for an Olympic and Paralympic Games. The seating structure is now taking shape, before the black and orange seats – representing the colours of a basketball – are put into place. At Games-time, the venue will host basketball, handball, wheelchair basketball, and wheelchair rugby.</p> <h5>Preparing The Ground</h5> <p>Work has begun on preparing the ground at Greenwich Park, the site of <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/greenwich-park.php">London’s Olympic equestrian venue</a>. The work, which will be carried out by London 2012 sub-contractors in association with The Royal Parks, will ensure that the condition of the grass is ideal for <a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2009/equestrian-stars-tour-greenwich-park.php">the competitors in 2012</a>. <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/greenwich-park-ground-preparation-work-begins-for-2012.php">Work will include irrigation, de-compaction, mowing, and some other enhancements</a>. The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) has also announced <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/08/athletes-village-to-feature-new-green-spaces.php">plans for thousands of new trees, parks, play areas, and open spaces</a> to support the new homes being delivered in the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/olympic-village.php">London 2012 Olympic Village</a>. Landscaping is already underway for the creation of an extensive wetlands area on the Village site, with the overall plans for these green spaces&nbsp;adding to the landscaping works already underway in the Olympic Park site, which is creating one of the largest new urban parks in the UK for over 100 years.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p>London was elected as the host city for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p> <p>Want to get involved in London 2012? How about <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/volunteer/index.php">volunteering</a>?</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1282608000) } [3]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(60) "Three Olympian brothers at The Olympic Museum for a donation" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(2145) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">They already made names for themselves at the XXI Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver last February. Three brothers from one family present at the Olympic Games is something quite exceptional, and it is for this reason that the people responsible for the Museum collections approached them when they were asking for donations in Vancouver. </p> <p>On Thursday 20 August at The Olympic Museum, the three Ligocki brothers, Luckasz, Michal and Mateusz, accompanied by their parents, donated to The Olympic Museum the full set of equipment they wore in Vancouver, either as athletes or as an official: snowboard, bindings, boots, helmet, gloves, mask, bodysuits, delegation clothing, etc. The donations also included accreditation cards, bibs and some photographs. </p> <p><img alt="" src="/Global/Images/News/08-2010/24/Donation_BIG_2.jpg" /></p> <p>The donation was made in the presence of Francis Gabet and Frédérique Jamolli, Director and Curator of The Olympic Museum respectively. All three athletes received a donor’s diploma signed by the IOC President, acknowledging their donation.</p> <p>In the book signed successively by the three brothers, Michal wrote: “I’m feeling so special, to give my Olympic equipment to this Museum. From now on I’ll feel that the memory of me and my family will live 4 ever!” </p> <h5>A bit of background…</h5> <p>Mateusz Ligocki (born 1982) participated in the Turin Games in 2006 in snowboard and snowboard cross. He was the only athlete to compete in the two disciplines. In Vancouver, he participated in the snowboard cross events. </p> <p>Michal Ligocki (born 1985) also participated in the Turin and Vancouver Games, but in half-pipe.</p> <p>The two brothers really want to participate in a third edition of the Games and are seriously preparing themselves for the 2014 Games in Sochi. </p> <p>As for the oldest Lukasz brother (born 1980), he is FIS snowboard A license judge and technical delegate for snowboard. He was the Deputy Chef de Mission for the Polish team in Whistler.</p> <p><img alt="" src="/Global/Images/News/08-2010/24/Donation_BIG_3.jpg" /><br /></p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(20) "8/23/2010 3:02:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=97661" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(2145) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">They already made names for themselves at the XXI Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver last February. Three brothers from one family present at the Olympic Games is something quite exceptional, and it is for this reason that the people responsible for the Museum collections approached them when they were asking for donations in Vancouver. </p> <p>On Thursday 20 August at The Olympic Museum, the three Ligocki brothers, Luckasz, Michal and Mateusz, accompanied by their parents, donated to The Olympic Museum the full set of equipment they wore in Vancouver, either as athletes or as an official: snowboard, bindings, boots, helmet, gloves, mask, bodysuits, delegation clothing, etc. The donations also included accreditation cards, bibs and some photographs. </p> <p><img alt="" src="/Global/Images/News/08-2010/24/Donation_BIG_2.jpg" /></p> <p>The donation was made in the presence of Francis Gabet and Frédérique Jamolli, Director and Curator of The Olympic Museum respectively. All three athletes received a donor’s diploma signed by the IOC President, acknowledging their donation.</p> <p>In the book signed successively by the three brothers, Michal wrote: “I’m feeling so special, to give my Olympic equipment to this Museum. From now on I’ll feel that the memory of me and my family will live 4 ever!” </p> <h5>A bit of background…</h5> <p>Mateusz Ligocki (born 1982) participated in the Turin Games in 2006 in snowboard and snowboard cross. He was the only athlete to compete in the two disciplines. In Vancouver, he participated in the snowboard cross events. </p> <p>Michal Ligocki (born 1985) also participated in the Turin and Vancouver Games, but in half-pipe.</p> <p>The two brothers really want to participate in a third edition of the Games and are seriously preparing themselves for the 2014 Games in Sochi. </p> <p>As for the oldest Lukasz brother (born 1980), he is FIS snowboard A license judge and technical delegate for snowboard. He was the Deputy Chef de Mission for the Polish team in Whistler.</p> <p><img alt="" src="/Global/Images/News/08-2010/24/Donation_BIG_3.jpg" /><br /></p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1282575720) } [4]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(38) "London 2012 Celebrates Two Years-To-Go" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(4241) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">27 July 2010 marks the two-years-to-go point before the opening of the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/splash/index.php">London 2012 Olympic Games</a>. This important milestone in London’s progress is being celebrated with a number of events across the host city and country. </p> <p>From 23-25 July, the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/open-weekend/index.php">London 2012 Open Weekend</a> was organised across the UK and included over 800 “<a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/london-2012-open-weekend-2010.php">challenging</a>” events for the public. This was followed today by the launch of London 2012’s specialist volunteer programme, the opening of London 2012’s first official shop, a number of special events in the Olympic Park, and <a href="http://www.london2012.com/press/media-releases/2010/07/london-2012-celebrates-two-years-to-go.php">numerous other events</a> organised by London 2012’s partners.</p> <h5>Huge Progress</h5> <p><a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Members/Count-Jacques-ROGGE/">International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge</a> said, “The new Olympic venues are now a visible part of London’s skyline, and the London 2012 Organising Committee is progressing well in its preparations to welcome the athletes of the world. With two years to go, London has made huge progress in the development of its Olympic project, and I am confident in London’s ability to stage Games of the highest standard, as we enter the back straight of this race that will lead us to 2012.” </p> <h5>Sport In The Park</h5> <p>With the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/index.php">main venues</a> in London’s Olympic Park on track to be completed next year, a number of special events are being held in the Park today, which shows the great progress that London has made in its construction projects. For example, Olympic gold medallist Sir Chris Hoy is taking part in a cycling activity within the velodrome, former NBA star John Amaechi is shooting some hoops in the basketball arena, Michael Johnson is sprinting on a temporary track in the Olympic Stadium, and the first group of people will be walking across the main access bridge between the Aquatics Centre and the Olympic Stadium.</p> <h5>Are You Ready? Plan Your Games!</h5> <p>The athletes are in full preparation for the 2012 Games, the venues are taking shape and the organisation is making <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Media/?articleNewsGroup=-1&amp;articleId=93762">solid progress</a>, but the question is are you ready for 2012? With the 2012 Games fast approaching, now is the time to start planning your role and your summer of 2012. Would you like to attend an Olympic event? Then <a href="http://www.tickets.london2012.com/?camefrom=CFC_UK_LONDON2012_L2012_SIGNUPSPLASH">sign up for ticketing information</a>. Thinking about volunteering? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/volunteering">Sign up for more information</a>. Perhaps attend an event during the Cultural Olympiad? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/cultural-olympiad/index.php">Find out more</a>. See the Olympic Torch Relay? It’s coming <a href="http://www.london2012.com/blog/2010/05/london-2012-torch-relay-bringing-the-games-to-your-doors.php">to a town near you</a>! Maybe create something and be <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/inspire-programme/index.php">part of the inspire programme</a>? Or teach children using the Games to inspire them? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/education/index.php">It’s all here</a>. There are numerous ways that you can play a part in 2012, start thinking and planning what you want to do now, so that you don’t miss out.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(21) "7/27/2010 12:19:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=95219" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(4241) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">27 July 2010 marks the two-years-to-go point before the opening of the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/splash/index.php">London 2012 Olympic Games</a>. This important milestone in London’s progress is being celebrated with a number of events across the host city and country. </p> <p>From 23-25 July, the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/open-weekend/index.php">London 2012 Open Weekend</a> was organised across the UK and included over 800 “<a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/london-2012-open-weekend-2010.php">challenging</a>” events for the public. This was followed today by the launch of London 2012’s specialist volunteer programme, the opening of London 2012’s first official shop, a number of special events in the Olympic Park, and <a href="http://www.london2012.com/press/media-releases/2010/07/london-2012-celebrates-two-years-to-go.php">numerous other events</a> organised by London 2012’s partners.</p> <h5>Huge Progress</h5> <p><a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Members/Count-Jacques-ROGGE/">International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge</a> said, “The new Olympic venues are now a visible part of London’s skyline, and the London 2012 Organising Committee is progressing well in its preparations to welcome the athletes of the world. With two years to go, London has made huge progress in the development of its Olympic project, and I am confident in London’s ability to stage Games of the highest standard, as we enter the back straight of this race that will lead us to 2012.” </p> <h5>Sport In The Park</h5> <p>With the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/index.php">main venues</a> in London’s Olympic Park on track to be completed next year, a number of special events are being held in the Park today, which shows the great progress that London has made in its construction projects. For example, Olympic gold medallist Sir Chris Hoy is taking part in a cycling activity within the velodrome, former NBA star John Amaechi is shooting some hoops in the basketball arena, Michael Johnson is sprinting on a temporary track in the Olympic Stadium, and the first group of people will be walking across the main access bridge between the Aquatics Centre and the Olympic Stadium.</p> <h5>Are You Ready? Plan Your Games!</h5> <p>The athletes are in full preparation for the 2012 Games, the venues are taking shape and the organisation is making <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Media/?articleNewsGroup=-1&amp;articleId=93762">solid progress</a>, but the question is are you ready for 2012? With the 2012 Games fast approaching, now is the time to start planning your role and your summer of 2012. Would you like to attend an Olympic event? Then <a href="http://www.tickets.london2012.com/?camefrom=CFC_UK_LONDON2012_L2012_SIGNUPSPLASH">sign up for ticketing information</a>. Thinking about volunteering? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/volunteering">Sign up for more information</a>. Perhaps attend an event during the Cultural Olympiad? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/cultural-olympiad/index.php">Find out more</a>. See the Olympic Torch Relay? It’s coming <a href="http://www.london2012.com/blog/2010/05/london-2012-torch-relay-bringing-the-games-to-your-doors.php">to a town near you</a>! Maybe create something and be <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/inspire-programme/index.php">part of the inspire programme</a>? Or teach children using the Games to inspire them? <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/education/index.php">It’s all here</a>. There are numerous ways that you can play a part in 2012, start thinking and planning what you want to do now, so that you don’t miss out.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1280233140) } [5]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(24) "London 2012 Open Weekend" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(3036) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">On 27 July, London 2012 will be celebrating two years-to-go until the start of its Olympic Games. In advance of this significant date, London 2012 is running its annual <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/open-weekend/index.php">Open Weekend</a> event, which is a UK-wide celebration taking place from 23 till 25 July. The event includes over 800 events across the country ranging from sport to art, dance to exhibitions, and each event features a special challenge: <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/upcoming-events/index.php?age=openweekend&amp;owd1=yes&amp;owd2=yes&amp;owd3=yes&amp;regionfilter=&amp;typefilter=&amp;q=&amp;x=26&amp;y=11">What will you do this weekend?</a></p> <h5>“Challenge Yourself”</h5> <p>The 2010 Open Weekend is based on the theme of “<a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/london-2012-open-weekend-2010.php">challenge yourself</a>”, with organisations setting public challenges at their events. This will allow everyone across the UK to attempt to set a new personal best by trying something new or by taking an existing interest to the next level. <a href="http://www.london2012.com/about-us/the-people-delivering-the-games/the-london-organising-committee/locog-board.php">LOCOG Chairman Seb Coe</a> had this to say about the Open Weekend, “Open Weekend will lead the nation into the two-year countdown to the start of the London 2012 Games, with new personal bests being set right across the UK. Open Weekend 2010 is another opportunity for thousands of people to join in with the London 2012 Games.”</p> <h5>Solid Progress<br /></h5> <p>With a little over two years to go until the Games begin, London 2012 is continuing to <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Media/?articleNewsGroup=-1&amp;articleId=93762">make solid progress on its preparations</a> for the Games, according to the International <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Commissions/Coordination-commissions--Olympic-Games1/?Tab=1">Olympic Committee’s (IOC) Coordination Commission</a>, which visited London only a few weeks ago. The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) has also recently <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/07/london-2012-venues-on-track-to-be-finished-next-year.php">unveiled a new set of milestones</a>, which outline how, by summer 2011, the structures of the main venues for London 2012 will be complete and ready to be handed over for testing, with all major new infrastructure finished and landscaping work well advanced across the Olympic Park. </p> <h5>LONDON 2012<br /></h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting, taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(20) "7/23/2010 3:30:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=94706" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(3036) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">On 27 July, London 2012 will be celebrating two years-to-go until the start of its Olympic Games. In advance of this significant date, London 2012 is running its annual <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/open-weekend/index.php">Open Weekend</a> event, which is a UK-wide celebration taking place from 23 till 25 July. The event includes over 800 events across the country ranging from sport to art, dance to exhibitions, and each event features a special challenge: <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/upcoming-events/index.php?age=openweekend&amp;owd1=yes&amp;owd2=yes&amp;owd3=yes&amp;regionfilter=&amp;typefilter=&amp;q=&amp;x=26&amp;y=11">What will you do this weekend?</a></p> <h5>“Challenge Yourself”</h5> <p>The 2010 Open Weekend is based on the theme of “<a href="http://www.london2012.com/videos/2010/london-2012-open-weekend-2010.php">challenge yourself</a>”, with organisations setting public challenges at their events. This will allow everyone across the UK to attempt to set a new personal best by trying something new or by taking an existing interest to the next level. <a href="http://www.london2012.com/about-us/the-people-delivering-the-games/the-london-organising-committee/locog-board.php">LOCOG Chairman Seb Coe</a> had this to say about the Open Weekend, “Open Weekend will lead the nation into the two-year countdown to the start of the London 2012 Games, with new personal bests being set right across the UK. Open Weekend 2010 is another opportunity for thousands of people to join in with the London 2012 Games.”</p> <h5>Solid Progress<br /></h5> <p>With a little over two years to go until the Games begin, London 2012 is continuing to <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Media/?articleNewsGroup=-1&amp;articleId=93762">make solid progress on its preparations</a> for the Games, according to the International <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Commissions/Coordination-commissions--Olympic-Games1/?Tab=1">Olympic Committee’s (IOC) Coordination Commission</a>, which visited London only a few weeks ago. The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) has also recently <a href="http://www.london2012.com/news/2010/07/london-2012-venues-on-track-to-be-finished-next-year.php">unveiled a new set of milestones</a>, which outline how, by summer 2011, the structures of the main venues for London 2012 will be complete and ready to be handed over for testing, with all major new infrastructure finished and landscaping work well advanced across the Olympic Park. </p> <h5>LONDON 2012<br /></h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting, taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1279899000) } [6]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(41) "London 2012 Announces Volunteer Programme" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(3620) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) has announced its plans to recruit up to 70,000 volunteers or “Games Makers” for the London Games. It is expected to be the biggest volunteer recruitment campaign in the post-war period in the UK, and LOCOG will be looking for dedicated and inspirational people representative of the diversity of London and the UK to apply for a wide variety of volunteer positions. <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Sponsoring/Sponsorship/McDonalds/">Olympic TOP partner McDonald’s</a> will be the presenting partner of the London volunteer programme and will use its expertise in customer service and training and its nationwide presence to help attract, select and train the diverse team that will be needed to make the 2012 Games a success.</p> <h5>Games Makers</h5> <p><a href="http://www.london2012.com/about-us/the-people-delivering-the-games/the-london-organising-committee/locog-board.php">Sebastian Coe</a>, Chairman of <a href="http://www.london2012.com/">LOCOG</a>, said: “London 2012 needs brilliant volunteers to help us deliver a great Olympic and Paralympic Games. Our volunteers will be called Games Makers to reflect the important role they will play in staging the 2012 Games. The programme to find our Games Makers will launch on 27 July 2010 and I urge anyone who is interested to come to our website to find out everything they need to know about volunteering in 2012.”</p> <h5>Different Roles<br /></h5> <p>There are two different types of volunteer role: specialists in areas such as medical services, sport or press operations; and generalists, with roles ranging from spectator assistants, uniform distributors and ticket checking. In addition to the LOCOG volunteers, the Mayor of London will shortly announce plans for the recruitment of city volunteers to be stationed at key transport hubs, at visitor attractions, and on the streets of the capital to make sure all visitors to London get the best possible welcome during the Games.&nbsp; </p> <h5>Key Dates<br /></h5> <p>Volunteer recruitment will start exactly two years before the London Games on 27 July 2010. The key dates for the process are:<br /><br />•&nbsp;27 July 2010: applications open for pre-identified applicants for specialist sport, press operations, anti-doping and medical roles and members of a wide range of disability specialist organisations. This is also an opportunity for those interested in the generalist roles to find out if they have what it takes to be a <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/volunteering/index.php">Games Maker via a dedicated section on the London 2012 website</a>. Recruitment also starts on this date for the Mayor’s London Volunteers scheme.<br /><br />•&nbsp;15 September 2010: applications open to the public for generalist roles and continue for specialist roles.<br /><br />•&nbsp;LOCOG today also confirmed that up to 1,500 of the Games Maker roles will be made available for those under the age of 18 through the ‘Young Games Maker’ programme that will be unveiled in July 2011.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012<br /></h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(21) "7/12/2010 11:30:00 AM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=94172" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(3620) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) has announced its plans to recruit up to 70,000 volunteers or “Games Makers” for the London Games. It is expected to be the biggest volunteer recruitment campaign in the post-war period in the UK, and LOCOG will be looking for dedicated and inspirational people representative of the diversity of London and the UK to apply for a wide variety of volunteer positions. <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Sponsoring/Sponsorship/McDonalds/">Olympic TOP partner McDonald’s</a> will be the presenting partner of the London volunteer programme and will use its expertise in customer service and training and its nationwide presence to help attract, select and train the diverse team that will be needed to make the 2012 Games a success.</p> <h5>Games Makers</h5> <p><a href="http://www.london2012.com/about-us/the-people-delivering-the-games/the-london-organising-committee/locog-board.php">Sebastian Coe</a>, Chairman of <a href="http://www.london2012.com/">LOCOG</a>, said: “London 2012 needs brilliant volunteers to help us deliver a great Olympic and Paralympic Games. Our volunteers will be called Games Makers to reflect the important role they will play in staging the 2012 Games. The programme to find our Games Makers will launch on 27 July 2010 and I urge anyone who is interested to come to our website to find out everything they need to know about volunteering in 2012.”</p> <h5>Different Roles<br /></h5> <p>There are two different types of volunteer role: specialists in areas such as medical services, sport or press operations; and generalists, with roles ranging from spectator assistants, uniform distributors and ticket checking. In addition to the LOCOG volunteers, the Mayor of London will shortly announce plans for the recruitment of city volunteers to be stationed at key transport hubs, at visitor attractions, and on the streets of the capital to make sure all visitors to London get the best possible welcome during the Games.&nbsp; </p> <h5>Key Dates<br /></h5> <p>Volunteer recruitment will start exactly two years before the London Games on 27 July 2010. The key dates for the process are:<br /><br />•&nbsp;27 July 2010: applications open for pre-identified applicants for specialist sport, press operations, anti-doping and medical roles and members of a wide range of disability specialist organisations. This is also an opportunity for those interested in the generalist roles to find out if they have what it takes to be a <a href="http://www.london2012.com/get-involved/volunteering/index.php">Games Maker via a dedicated section on the London 2012 website</a>. Recruitment also starts on this date for the Mayor’s London Volunteers scheme.<br /><br />•&nbsp;15 September 2010: applications open to the public for generalist roles and continue for specialist roles.<br /><br />•&nbsp;LOCOG today also confirmed that up to 1,500 of the Games Maker roles will be made available for those under the age of 18 through the ‘Young Games Maker’ programme that will be unveiled in July 2011.</p> <h5>LONDON 2012<br /></h5> <p>London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1278934200) } [7]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(45) "Solid progress continues with two years to go" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(4276) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Commissions/Coordination-commissions--Olympic-Games1/?Tab=1">Coordination Commission for the London 2012 Games</a> concluded today its sixth visit to the British capital since the city was awarded the Games in 2005. The meetings, which ran from 6 to 8 July, saw good progress being made across the project, particularly in the area of venue and infrastructure construction. The week’s meetings began with <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Members/Count-Jacques-ROGGE/">IOC President Jacques Rogge</a> and <a href="http://www.olympic.org/content/The-IOC/Members/Mr-Denis-OSWALD/">Coordination Commission Chairman Denis Oswald</a> meeting the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson, as well as the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, at No.10 Downing Street. </p> <h5>Completely Behind The Project </h5> <p><font size="2">“We held very constructive talks with Prime Minister Cameron and Mayor Johnson about the upcoming Games, and we are assured that the government at all levels remains completely behind the project,” said Oswald. “We also realise that we are working in a difficult economic environment at the moment, but we are confident that LOCOG’s early entry into the market and its robust private sector financing will mean that the delivery of top class Games will not be affected.”</font></p> <h5>Visits And Reports</h5> <p><font size="2">During its stay, the Commission visited </font><a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/index.php"><font size="2">a number of the Olympic venues</font></a><font size="2">, including the Olympic Park, Olympic Village, Broxbourne, Excel, and Royal Holloway, and heard reports from the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) on the progress being made in preparing the services for a number of Games participants, such as the athletes, media, spectators, National Olympic Committees and International Federations, as well as in areas like technology, medical services, commercial, transport, communications, marketing, culture, ceremonies and education. LOCOG also updated the Commission on its plans for the </font><a href="http://www.tickets.london2012.com/?camefrom=CFC_UK_LONDON2012_L2012_SIGNUPSPLASH"><font size="2">ticketing</font></a><font size="2">, volunteer and Olympic Torch Relay programmes, which will be rolled out over the coming two years. </font></p> <h5>Operational Testing Phase</h5> <p><font size="2">With the Games a little over two years away, </font><a href="http://www.london2012.com/"><font size="2">London 2012</font></a><font size="2"> is now approaching a crucial stage in its development as it shifts from the planning stage into its operational testing phase. “The staff at LOCOG is top class and has been key to the success of the project so far. And there have been many successes, including the great advances in construction, in particular at the Olympic Park,” Oswald said. “They have done an exemplary job so far, but now is not the time for complacency; they need to continue working diligently and to focus on the details of the project during the upcoming operational testing phase in order to put on great Games in 2012.” In the next 18 months, LOCOG will run numerous tests to determine that everything is in place to smoothly deliver the Games. It is at this stage that the local organisers will determine where improvements can be made and calibrate their plans accordingly. The Commission said it was impressed with the work completed to date and was looking forward to seeing LOCOG and its partners’ plans put to the test and refined over the coming months.</font></p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p><font size="2">London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</font></p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(19) "7/8/2010 4:30:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=93762" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(4276) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Commissions/Coordination-commissions--Olympic-Games1/?Tab=1">Coordination Commission for the London 2012 Games</a> concluded today its sixth visit to the British capital since the city was awarded the Games in 2005. The meetings, which ran from 6 to 8 July, saw good progress being made across the project, particularly in the area of venue and infrastructure construction. The week’s meetings began with <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/The-IOC/Members/Count-Jacques-ROGGE/">IOC President Jacques Rogge</a> and <a href="http://www.olympic.org/content/The-IOC/Members/Mr-Denis-OSWALD/">Coordination Commission Chairman Denis Oswald</a> meeting the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson, as well as the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, at No.10 Downing Street. </p> <h5>Completely Behind The Project </h5> <p><font size="2">“We held very constructive talks with Prime Minister Cameron and Mayor Johnson about the upcoming Games, and we are assured that the government at all levels remains completely behind the project,” said Oswald. “We also realise that we are working in a difficult economic environment at the moment, but we are confident that LOCOG’s early entry into the market and its robust private sector financing will mean that the delivery of top class Games will not be affected.”</font></p> <h5>Visits And Reports</h5> <p><font size="2">During its stay, the Commission visited </font><a href="http://www.london2012.com/games/venues/index.php"><font size="2">a number of the Olympic venues</font></a><font size="2">, including the Olympic Park, Olympic Village, Broxbourne, Excel, and Royal Holloway, and heard reports from the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) on the progress being made in preparing the services for a number of Games participants, such as the athletes, media, spectators, National Olympic Committees and International Federations, as well as in areas like technology, medical services, commercial, transport, communications, marketing, culture, ceremonies and education. LOCOG also updated the Commission on its plans for the </font><a href="http://www.tickets.london2012.com/?camefrom=CFC_UK_LONDON2012_L2012_SIGNUPSPLASH"><font size="2">ticketing</font></a><font size="2">, volunteer and Olympic Torch Relay programmes, which will be rolled out over the coming two years. </font></p> <h5>Operational Testing Phase</h5> <p><font size="2">With the Games a little over two years away, </font><a href="http://www.london2012.com/"><font size="2">London 2012</font></a><font size="2"> is now approaching a crucial stage in its development as it shifts from the planning stage into its operational testing phase. “The staff at LOCOG is top class and has been key to the success of the project so far. And there have been many successes, including the great advances in construction, in particular at the Olympic Park,” Oswald said. “They have done an exemplary job so far, but now is not the time for complacency; they need to continue working diligently and to focus on the details of the project during the upcoming operational testing phase in order to put on great Games in 2012.” In the next 18 months, LOCOG will run numerous tests to determine that everything is in place to smoothly deliver the Games. It is at this stage that the local organisers will determine where improvements can be made and calibrate their plans accordingly. The Commission said it was impressed with the work completed to date and was looking forward to seeing LOCOG and its partners’ plans put to the test and refined over the coming months.</font></p> <h5>LONDON 2012</h5> <p><font size="2">London was elected as the Host City for the Games of the XXX Olympiad on 6 July 2005 at the 117th IOC Session in Singapore. London eventually succeeded in the fourth round of voting taking 54 votes from a possible 104. London faced stiff opposition during the vote from the other four candidate cities: Paris, New York, Moscow and Madrid. There will be 26 sports on the Olympic Programme in London in 2012 and around 10,500 athletes.</font></p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1278606600) } [8]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(115) "[PRESS RELEASE] New government maintains all-party support for Games as solid progress continues with 2 years to go" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(6377) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s Coordination Commission for the London 2012 Games concluded today its sixth visit to the British capital since the city was awarded the Games in 2005. The meetings, which ran from 6 to 8 July, saw good progress being made across the project, particularly in the area of venue and infrastructure construction. The week’s meetings began with IOC President Jacques Rogge and Coordination Commission Chairman Denis Oswald meeting the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson, as well as the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, at No.10 Downing Street. </p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">“We held very constructive talks with Prime Minister Cameron and Mayor Johnson about the upcoming Games, and we are assured that the government at all levels remains completely behind the project,” said Oswald. “We also realise that we are working in a difficult economic environment at the moment, but we are confident that LOCOG’s early entry into the market and its robust private sector financing will mean that the delivery of top class Games will not be affected.”</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office"/?><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">London 2012 Chairman Sebastian Coe said, "This week, we have taken the IOC through the progress we are making across both the Olympic and Paralympic Games, and we are delighted with their very positive report. With two years to go, our focus is very much on working through the details of delivering this large and complex project. There will of course be challenges ahead, but we have an excellent team in place, and we benefit from great partnerships with the government, the Mayor of London, our sponsors and, of course, both the British Olympic Association and the British Paralympic Association. The strength of this team, combined with the tremendous support of the public, will help us work through any challenges and deliver&nbsp;Olympic and Paralympic Games we will all be proud of in 2012."</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">During its stay, the Commission visited a number of the Olympic venues, including the Olympic Park, Olympic Village, Broxbourne, Excel, and Royal Holloway, and heard reports from the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) on the progress being made in preparing the services for a number of Games participants, such as the athletes, media, spectators, National Olympic Committees and International Federations, as well as in areas like technology, medical services, commercial, transport, communications, marketing, culture, ceremonies and education. LOCOG also updated the Commission on its plans for the ticketing, volunteer and Olympic Torch Relay programmes, which will be rolled out over the coming two years. </span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">With the Games a little over two years away, London 2012 is now approaching a crucial stage in its development as it shifts from the planning stage into its operational testing phase.</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">“The staff at LOCOG is top class and has been key to the success of the project so far. And there have been many successes, including the great advances in construction, in particular at the Olympic Park,” Oswald said. “They have done an exemplary job so far, but now is not the time for complacency; they need to continue working diligently and to focus on the details of the project during the up-coming operational testing phase in order to put on great Games in 2012.”</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p class="iocCopyNoSpacing">In the next 18 months, LOCOG will run numerous tests to determine that everything is in place to smoothly deliver the Games. It is at this stage that the local organisers will determine where improvements can be made and calibrate their plans accordingly. The Commission said it was impressed with the work completed to date and was looking forward to seeing LOCOG and its partners’ plans put to the test and refined over the coming months.</p> <p class="iocCopyIntro"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-font-family: Arial; mso-fareast-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-fareast-language: EN-US; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA"></span>&nbsp;</p> <p align="center">###</p> <p><font size="2">For more information, please contact the IOC Communications Department: <br />Tel: +41 21 621 6000 e-mail: </font><a href="mailto:pressoffice@olympic.org"><font size="2">pressoffice@olympic.org</font></a></p> <p><font size="2"><strong>Videos</strong><br />Broadcast quality videos can be accessed and downloaded for free: <a href="http://www.videoforum2.afp.com/VideoForum/AuthFiles/login.aspx">click here</a> <br />Login: IOC<br />Password: MEDIA2009 <br />YouTube: </font><a href="http://www.youtube.com/iocmedia"><font size="2">www.youtube.com/iocmedia</font></a><font size="2"> <br />&nbsp; <br /><strong>Photos</strong><br />For an extensive selection of photos available shortly after each event, please follow us on <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/iocmedia">Flickr</a>.<br />To request archive photos and footage, please contact our Images team at: </font><a href="mailto:images@olympic.org"><font size="2">images@olympic.org</font></a><font size="2">.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><strong>Social media</strong><br />For up-to-the-minute information on the IOC and regular updates, please follow us on <a href="http://twitter.com/olympics">Twitter</a> and <a href="http://www.facebook.com/olympicgames">Facebook</a>.</font></p> <p><font size="2"><br />&nbsp;</font></p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(19) "7/8/2010 4:00:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=93761" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(6377) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s Coordination Commission for the London 2012 Games concluded today its sixth visit to the British capital since the city was awarded the Games in 2005. The meetings, which ran from 6 to 8 July, saw good progress being made across the project, particularly in the area of venue and infrastructure construction. The week’s meetings began with IOC President Jacques Rogge and Coordination Commission Chairman Denis Oswald meeting the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson, as well as the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, at No.10 Downing Street. </p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">“We held very constructive talks with Prime Minister Cameron and Mayor Johnson about the upcoming Games, and we are assured that the government at all levels remains completely behind the project,” said Oswald. “We also realise that we are working in a difficult economic environment at the moment, but we are confident that LOCOG’s early entry into the market and its robust private sector financing will mean that the delivery of top class Games will not be affected.”</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office"/?><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">London 2012 Chairman Sebastian Coe said, "This week, we have taken the IOC through the progress we are making across both the Olympic and Paralympic Games, and we are delighted with their very positive report. With two years to go, our focus is very much on working through the details of delivering this large and complex project. There will of course be challenges ahead, but we have an excellent team in place, and we benefit from great partnerships with the government, the Mayor of London, our sponsors and, of course, both the British Olympic Association and the British Paralympic Association. The strength of this team, combined with the tremendous support of the public, will help us work through any challenges and deliver&nbsp;Olympic and Paralympic Games we will all be proud of in 2012."</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">During its stay, the Commission visited a number of the Olympic venues, including the Olympic Park, Olympic Village, Broxbourne, Excel, and Royal Holloway, and heard reports from the London 2012 Organising Committee (LOCOG) on the progress being made in preparing the services for a number of Games participants, such as the athletes, media, spectators, National Olympic Committees and International Federations, as well as in areas like technology, medical services, commercial, transport, communications, marketing, culture, ceremonies and education. LOCOG also updated the Commission on its plans for the ticketing, volunteer and Olympic Torch Relay programmes, which will be rolled out over the coming two years. </span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">With the Games a little over two years away, London 2012 is now approaching a crucial stage in its development as it shifts from the planning stage into its operational testing phase.</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'">“The staff at LOCOG is top class and has been key to the success of the project so far. And there have been many successes, including the great advances in construction, in particular at the Olympic Park,” Oswald said. “They have done an exemplary job so far, but now is not the time for complacency; they need to continue working diligently and to focus on the details of the project during the up-coming operational testing phase in order to put on great Games in 2012.”</span><span style="FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'"><o:p></o:p></span></font></p> <p class="iocCopyNoSpacing">In the next 18 months, LOCOG will run numerous tests to determine that everything is in place to smoothly deliver the Games. It is at this stage that the local organisers will determine where improvements can be made and calibrate their plans accordingly. The Commission said it was impressed with the work completed to date and was looking forward to seeing LOCOG and its partners’ plans put to the test and refined over the coming months.</p> <p class="iocCopyIntro"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Arial','sans-serif'; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-font-family: Arial; mso-fareast-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-fareast-language: EN-US; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA"></span>&nbsp;</p> <p align="center">###</p> <p><font size="2">For more information, please contact the IOC Communications Department: <br />Tel: +41 21 621 6000 e-mail: </font><a href="mailto:pressoffice@olympic.org"><font size="2">pressoffice@olympic.org</font></a></p> <p><font size="2"><strong>Videos</strong><br />Broadcast quality videos can be accessed and downloaded for free: <a href="http://www.videoforum2.afp.com/VideoForum/AuthFiles/login.aspx">click here</a> <br />Login: IOC<br />Password: MEDIA2009 <br />YouTube: </font><a href="http://www.youtube.com/iocmedia"><font size="2">www.youtube.com/iocmedia</font></a><font size="2"> <br />&nbsp; <br /><strong>Photos</strong><br />For an extensive selection of photos available shortly after each event, please follow us on <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/iocmedia">Flickr</a>.<br />To request archive photos and footage, please contact our Images team at: </font><a href="mailto:images@olympic.org"><font size="2">images@olympic.org</font></a><font size="2">.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><strong>Social media</strong><br />For up-to-the-minute information on the IOC and regular updates, please follow us on <a href="http://twitter.com/olympics">Twitter</a> and <a href="http://www.facebook.com/olympicgames">Facebook</a>.</font></p> <p><font size="2"><br />&nbsp;</font></p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1278604800) } [9]=> array(13) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(57) "[PRESS RELEASE] IOC President Visits No.10 Downing Street" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(3108) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">Jacques Rogge, the President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), met with the new British Prime Minister David Cameron at No.10 Downing Street today. The visit to see the new British leader was part of a full day of Olympic events for the President in the next Olympic host city. </p> <p>He started the day by addressing London 2012’s staff, before going on to visit the Olympic Park venues and later met the Mayor of London Boris Johnson. </p> <p>Following his meeting with Prime Minister Cameron, President Rogge said, “We had very productive discussions with the Prime Minister and the Mayor about the London 2012 Games and the development of sport in the UK. It is a sign of the government's commitment to the 2012 Games that such a meeting was organised so early in the life of the new government. The Prime Minister reassured me of the government’s continued support for London 2012 and we are looking forward to continuing the bi-partisan approach so vital to a successful Games. LOCOG and the ODA have done amazing things, and huge progress has been made - as we enter the crucial final delivery&nbsp; phase. But we are confident, not complacent. LOCOG and the ODA are doing a great job in what are tough financial circumstances - and we all continue to ensure we make intelligent use of available resources."<br /><br />The meeting with the British Prime Minister at No.10 Downing Street also included Olympic sport leaders Lord Moynihan, Lord Coe, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson.</p> <p>Speaking after the meeting Sebastian Coe, Chairman of LOCOG, the organisers of London 2012, added, "The meetings today demonstrate the commitment the Government and the Mayor have to delivering a great Games that will energise the country.&nbsp; Every day we focus on hosting a Games that delivers pride and value for&nbsp;money to the nation and we look forward to taking the IOC through the progress we are making right across this project over the next few days."</p> <p>As part of the Olympic Park visit, Rogge helped to put in place the 2012th seat in the Olympic Stadium. The President was assisted in his task by the Chairman of the IOC’s Coordination Commission Denis Oswald, Chairman of London 2012 Sebastian Coe, IOC member Craig Reedie and some of the children who were present in Singapore for&nbsp;the 2012 vote. In a little over two years' time, these seats will be where thousands of spectators will be able to watch the world’s best athletes compete.</p> <p>At a meeting later in the day with Mayor Boris Johnson, President Rogge was able to listen to the Mayor's plans to energise the capital and its people in the run-up to, during, and after the Games of 2012. </p> <p>President Jacques Rogge also visited the headquarters of the British Olympic Association (BOA) in central London.&nbsp; While at the BOA,&nbsp;Rogge met with BOA Chairman Colin Moynihan, Chief Executive Andy Hunt and members of the BOA Board to review Team GB’s preparation and the sports legacy plans for the London 2012 Olympic Games.</p>" ["pubdate#"]=> int(1) ["pubdate"]=> string(19) "7/5/2010 7:50:00 PM" ["guid#"]=> int(1) ["guid@"]=> string(11) "ispermalink" ["guid@ispermalink"]=> string(4) "true" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=93533" ["summary#"]=> int(1) ["summary"]=> string(3108) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">Jacques Rogge, the President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), met with the new British Prime Minister David Cameron at No.10 Downing Street today. The visit to see the new British leader was part of a full day of Olympic events for the President in the next Olympic host city. </p> <p>He started the day by addressing London 2012’s staff, before going on to visit the Olympic Park venues and later met the Mayor of London Boris Johnson. </p> <p>Following his meeting with Prime Minister Cameron, President Rogge said, “We had very productive discussions with the Prime Minister and the Mayor about the London 2012 Games and the development of sport in the UK. It is a sign of the government's commitment to the 2012 Games that such a meeting was organised so early in the life of the new government. The Prime Minister reassured me of the government’s continued support for London 2012 and we are looking forward to continuing the bi-partisan approach so vital to a successful Games. LOCOG and the ODA have done amazing things, and huge progress has been made - as we enter the crucial final delivery&nbsp; phase. But we are confident, not complacent. LOCOG and the ODA are doing a great job in what are tough financial circumstances - and we all continue to ensure we make intelligent use of available resources."<br /><br />The meeting with the British Prime Minister at No.10 Downing Street also included Olympic sport leaders Lord Moynihan, Lord Coe, Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt and Olympics Minister Hugh Robertson.</p> <p>Speaking after the meeting Sebastian Coe, Chairman of LOCOG, the organisers of London 2012, added, "The meetings today demonstrate the commitment the Government and the Mayor have to delivering a great Games that will energise the country.&nbsp; Every day we focus on hosting a Games that delivers pride and value for&nbsp;money to the nation and we look forward to taking the IOC through the progress we are making right across this project over the next few days."</p> <p>As part of the Olympic Park visit, Rogge helped to put in place the 2012th seat in the Olympic Stadium. The President was assisted in his task by the Chairman of the IOC’s Coordination Commission Denis Oswald, Chairman of London 2012 Sebastian Coe, IOC member Craig Reedie and some of the children who were present in Singapore for&nbsp;the 2012 vote. In a little over two years' time, these seats will be where thousands of spectators will be able to watch the world’s best athletes compete.</p> <p>At a meeting later in the day with Mayor Boris Johnson, President Rogge was able to listen to the Mayor's plans to energise the capital and its people in the run-up to, during, and after the Games of 2012. </p> <p>President Jacques Rogge also visited the headquarters of the British Olympic Association (BOA) in central London.&nbsp; While at the BOA,&nbsp;Rogge met with BOA Chairman Colin Moynihan, Chief Executive Andy Hunt and members of the BOA Board to review Team GB’s preparation and the sports legacy plans for the London 2012 Olympic Games.</p>" ["date_timestamp"]=> int(1278359400) } } ["channel"]=> array(14) { ["title#"]=> int(1) ["title"]=> string(38) "International Olympic Committee : News" ["link#"]=> int(1) ["link"]=> string(75) "http://www.olympic.org/rss/feed.aspx?Language=en&NewsPage=29&Aggregate=true" ["description#"]=> int(1) ["description"]=> string(65) "WWW.OLYMPIC.ORG - Official website of the Olympic Movement - News" ["copyright#"]=> int(1) ["copyright"]=> string(35) "Copyright CIO. 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["feed/language#"]=> int(1) ["feed/language"]=> string(2) "en" ["feed/tagline#"]=> int(1) ["feed/tagline"]=> string(65) "WWW.OLYMPIC.ORG - Official website of the Olympic Movement - News" ["feed/subtitle#"]=> int(1) ["feed/subtitle"]=> string(65) "WWW.OLYMPIC.ORG - Official website of the Olympic Movement - News" ["feed/id"]=> string(75) "http://www.olympic.org/rss/feed.aspx?Language=en&NewsPage=29&Aggregate=true" ["update/last"]=> int(1283549379) ["update/ttl"]=> int(94) ["update/timed"]=> string(13) "automatically" ["update/hold"]=> string(9) "scheduled" ["update/unfinished"]=> string(3) "yes" ["map authors"]=> array(1) { ["name"]=> array(1) { ["international olympic committee : news"]=> string(1) "2" } } ["update/processed"]=> string(649) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=78310 http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=78309 http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=78292 http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=78187 http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=78140 http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=78107 http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=77662 http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=77657 http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=77591 http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=77601" ["link/uri"]=> string(75) "http://www.olympic.org/rss/feed.aspx?Language=en&NewsPage=29&Aggregate=true" ["link/name"]=> string(38) "International Olympic Committee : News" ["link/id"]=> string(2) "28" } ["post"]=> array(16) { ["post_title"]=> string(38) "Sochi Starts Search For Olympic Mascot" ["post_content"]=> string(2156) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The Organising Committee for the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games has launched a nationwide competition in Russia to design the mascot for the Sochi Olympic Games. The competition will run from 1 September till 5 December 2010, and participants can submit their ideas through <a href="http://talisman.sochi2014.ru/">a special web portal</a> (in Russian only) or by mail. An expert jury, made-up of filmmakers, animators, artists, cultural workers, professional marketers and athletes, will then create a shortlist of finalists. The winning design will be decided on 7 February 2011 through a public SMS and telephone vote. The winner will receive two tickets to the Opening Ceremony of the Games.</p> <h5>A long history of Olympic mascots</h5> <p>The first official Olympic mascot - Waldi the dachshund - was launched on the occasion of the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Summer/Munich-1972/">1972 Olympic Games in Munich</a>, although an unofficial mascot called "Schuss" had appeared at the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Winter/Grenoble-1968/">1968 Winter Games in Grenoble</a>. Since that time, the mascot has become a regular feature at the Games appearing alone or with friends and taking not only animal forms but also those of traditional dolls and even an ice cube and a piece of snow. The latest mascot to join this special Olympic family is <a href="http://www.mylondon2012.com/mascots/">Wenlock</a>, who will be welcoming fans to London in 2012.&nbsp;</p> <h5>Sochi 2014</h5> <p><a href="http://www.sochi2014.ru">Sochi</a> was elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala City on 4 July 2007. Sochi won the vote against the cities of Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea) in the second round of voting. The Russian city edged out PyeongChang 51 votes to 47, with Salzburg having been eliminated in round one. The Sochi Games will play host to the seven Olympic Winter sports currently on the Olympic programme and will run from 7 to 23 February 2014.</p>" ["post_excerpt"]=> string(2156) "<p class="iocCopyIntro">The Organising Committee for the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games has launched a nationwide competition in Russia to design the mascot for the Sochi Olympic Games. The competition will run from 1 September till 5 December 2010, and participants can submit their ideas through <a href="http://talisman.sochi2014.ru/">a special web portal</a> (in Russian only) or by mail. An expert jury, made-up of filmmakers, animators, artists, cultural workers, professional marketers and athletes, will then create a shortlist of finalists. The winning design will be decided on 7 February 2011 through a public SMS and telephone vote. The winner will receive two tickets to the Opening Ceremony of the Games.</p> <h5>A long history of Olympic mascots</h5> <p>The first official Olympic mascot - Waldi the dachshund - was launched on the occasion of the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Summer/Munich-1972/">1972 Olympic Games in Munich</a>, although an unofficial mascot called "Schuss" had appeared at the <a href="http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/All-Past-Olympic-Games/Winter/Grenoble-1968/">1968 Winter Games in Grenoble</a>. Since that time, the mascot has become a regular feature at the Games appearing alone or with friends and taking not only animal forms but also those of traditional dolls and even an ice cube and a piece of snow. The latest mascot to join this special Olympic family is <a href="http://www.mylondon2012.com/mascots/">Wenlock</a>, who will be welcoming fans to London in 2012.&nbsp;</p> <h5>Sochi 2014</h5> <p><a href="http://www.sochi2014.ru">Sochi</a> was elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games at the 119th IOC Session in Guatemala City on 4 July 2007. Sochi won the vote against the cities of Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea) in the second round of voting. The Russian city edged out PyeongChang 51 votes to 47, with Salzburg having been eliminated in round one. The Sochi Games will play host to the seven Olympic Winter sports currently on the Olympic programme and will run from 7 to 23 February 2014.</p>" ["epoch"]=> array(3) { ["issued"]=> int(1283421180) ["created"]=> NULL ["modified"]=> int(1283421180) } ["post_date"]=> string(19) "2010-09-02 03:53:00" ["post_modified"]=> string(19) "2010-09-02 03:53:00" ["post_date_gmt"]=> string(19) "2010-09-02 09:53:00" ["post_modified_gmt"]=> string(19) "2010-09-02 09:53:00" ["post_status"]=> string(7) "publish" ["comment_status"]=> string(4) "open" ["ping_status"]=> string(4) "open" ["guid"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=99082" ["meta"]=> array(6) { ["syndication_source"]=> string(38) "International Olympic Committee : News" ["syndication_source_uri"]=> string(75) "http://www.olympic.org/rss/feed.aspx?Language=en&NewsPage=29&Aggregate=true" ["syndication_feed"]=> string(75) "http://www.olympic.org/rss/feed.aspx?Language=en&NewsPage=29&Aggregate=true" ["syndication_feed_id"]=> string(2) "28" ["syndication_permalink"]=> string(64) "http://www.olympic.org/en/content/Olympic-Games/?articleId=99082" ["syndication_item_hash"]=> string(32) "f720b731bb366a016497c21570952acb" } ["tags_input"]=> array(0) { } ["post_author"]=> int(2) ["post_category"]=> array(1) { [0]=> int(1) } } ["_freshness"]=> int(2) ["_wp_id"]=> int(0) ["uri_attrs"]=> array(25) { [0]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(1) "a" [1]=> string(4) "href" } [1]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(6) "applet" [1]=> string(8) "codebase" } [2]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(4) "area" [1]=> string(4) "href" } [3]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(10) "blockquote" [1]=> string(4) "cite" } [4]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(4) "body" [1]=> string(10) "background" } [5]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(3) "del" [1]=> string(4) "cite" } [6]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(4) "form" [1]=> string(6) "action" } [7]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(5) "frame" [1]=> string(8) "longdesc" } [8]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(5) "frame" [1]=> string(3) "src" } [9]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(6) "iframe" [1]=> string(8) "longdesc" } [10]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(6) "iframe" [1]=> string(3) "src" } [11]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(4) "head" [1]=> string(7) "profile" } [12]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(3) "img" [1]=> string(8) "longdesc" } [13]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(3) "img" [1]=> string(3) "src" } [14]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(3) "img" [1]=> string(6) "usemap" } [15]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(5) "input" [1]=> string(3) "src" } [16]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(5) "input" [1]=> string(6) "usemap" } [17]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(3) "ins" [1]=> string(4) "cite" } [18]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(4) "link" [1]=> string(4) "href" } [19]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(6) "object" [1]=> string(7) "classid" } [20]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(6) "object" [1]=> string(8) "codebase" } [21]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(6) "object" [1]=> string(4) "data" } [22]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(6) "object" [1]=> string(6) "usemap" } [23]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(1) "q" [1]=> string(4) "cite" } [24]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(6) "script" [1]=> string(3) "src" } } ["_base"]=> NULL ["strip_attrs"]=> array(1) { [0]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(6) "[a-z]+" [1]=> string(6) "target" } } } }